This collective volume deals with the language of adventure tourism from different approaches, such as linguistics, semantics, and pragmatics. The papers selected delve into different languages (Spanish, English, and Italian), either with a monolingual or a bilingual approach. They revolve around several parts of speech (e.g., verbs, adjectives), distinct phraseological units (e.g., collocations, compounds), and other aspects (e.g., accessibility, natural language processing) by relying on a corpus-based or corpus-driven methodology. Given the complete analysis of the main features of this language, this volume enhances the understanding of current terminology and also offers techniques that can be replicated in the study of other areas of knowledge.
Table Of Contents Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction - Lexical
domains in the field of adventure tourism - The language of accessible
adventure tourism - Descriptive adjectives in adventure tourism: A
corpus-assisted English-Spanish contrastive study - Methodological advances
in lexical pattern extraction: Examples from Spanish adventure tourism - The
argument structure of motion verbs in Spanish: A methodological proposal
applied to DicoAdventure - Prepositional phrase collocations of motion verbs:
A corpus-driven study in adventure tourism - Frame Semantics and
domain-specific resources - Patterns and perspectives in the language of
Italian and British walking holidays - Syntactic alternations with verbs of
motion: A corpus-driven analysis of the language of adventure tourism - The
use of compounds in the adventure tourism lexicon
Isabel Durįn-Muńoz (PhD) is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of English and German Philologies of Universidad de Córdoba (Spain). She is a researcher in European, national, and regional R&D projects and an active member of academic organizations (AESLA, AELINCO, AETER). Her main research lines are corpus linguistics, terminology, lexico-semantics, linguistic technologies and ICTs for foreign language teaching.
Eva Lucķa Jiménez-Navarro (PhD) is an Assistant Professor at the Department of English and German of Universidad de Córdoba (Spain). She is an active member of academic organizations (AESLA, AELINCO) and has participated in the organization of several international conferences. Her main research lines are phraseology, terminology, specialized languages, lexicography, corpus linguistic and cognitive semantics.