Eurokd
European KnowledgeDevelopment Institute
Language Teaching Research Quarterly

e‐ISSN

    

2667-6753

CiteScore

  exclamation mark

1.2

ICV

  exclamation mark

124.94

SNIP

  exclamation mark

0.604

SJR

  exclamation mark

0.283

CiteScore

  exclamation mark

1.2

ICV

  exclamation mark

124.94

SNIP

  exclamation mark

0.604

SJR

  exclamation mark

0.283

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Original Research

A Corpus-based Study of Academic Vocabulary in Physiotherapy Research Articles

Language Teaching Research Quarterly, Volume 9, Pages 69-82, https://doi.org/10.32038/ltrq.2019.09.06

Scientific English is not homogenous but varies in relation to the contexts. As a contribution to the field, this study developed a list of academic words used frequently in physiotherapy research articles (RAs) and compared it with the distribution of high frequency words in Coxhead’s (2000) Academic Word List (AWL) and West’s (1953) General Service (GSL). By analyzing a 1.7 million-word corpus, 1450 high frequent academic word families were identified and constituted the Physiotherapy Academic Word List (PAWL). The analysis showed that, of the 570 word families in AWL, 562 occurred frequently in physiotherapy research articles (RAs) and this provided a coverage of 11.51 of the tokens in the corpus. In addition, 406 word families (accounting for 28% of the word families in PAWL) found to be used frequently in PRAC had not been listed in GSL and AWL. The results indicate that AWL (Coxhead, 2000) is not entirely useful for physiotherapy learners because of the narrow coverage of some word families and the shortage of frequently used physiotherapy academic words. The established PAWL may serve as a guide for instructors in curriculum preparation, and for physiotherapy English learners in setting their vocabulary learning goals.

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Acknowledgments

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Funding

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Conflict of Interests

No, there are no conflicting interests. 


Open Access

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. You may view a copy of Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License here: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/