The series serves to propagate investigations into language usage, especially with respect to computational support. This includes all forms of text handling activity, not only interlingual translations, but also conversions carried out in response...
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The series serves to propagate investigations into language usage, especially with respect to computational support. This includes all forms of text handling activity, not only interlingual translations, but also conversions carried out in response to different communicative tasks. Among the major topics are problems of text transfer and the interplay between human and machine activities. Intro -- Acknowledgements -- 1 Introduction -- I Texts - The CroCo resource -- 2 Corpus methodology and design -- 3 Corpus enrichment, representation, exploitation, and quality control -- II Global findings -- 4 Generating hypotheses and operationalizations: The example of explicitness/explicitation -- 5 A characterization of the resource based on shallow statistics -- 6 Heuristic examination of translation shifts -- III Case studies -- 7 Grammatical shifts in English-German noun phrases -- 8 Variation within the grammatical function 'subject' in English-German and German-English translations -- 9 Cohesion in English and German -- 10 Some syntactic features of nominal coreferring expressions -- 11 Register-induced properties of translations -- IV Computational applications -- 12 Towards a parallel treebank -- 13 Applications in computational linguistics -- V Generalizations, Conclusions and Outlook -- 14 Towards a typology of translation properties -- 15 Conclusions and outlook: An empirical perspective on translation studies -- References -- Index.