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Lista de candidatos sometidos a examen:
1) group membership (*)
(*) Términos presentes en el nuestro glosario de lingüística

1) Candidate: group membership


Is in goldstandard

1
paper CL_LiteraturayLingüísticatxt350 - : ^[37]1"Language users everywhere tend to associate particular linguistic forms with specific kinds of speakers or contexts of speaking (a basic assumption of variationist sociolinguistics). Meaning derived in this way from contiguity or association is known in the semiotics of C. S. Peirce (1960) (and others) as indexicality. In Silverstein's system, which builds on Peirce's work, first order indexicality is the pre-ideological but still semiotic work of forming these associations. As Lesley Milroy points out, not only time-honored social categories such as class, gender, and ethnicity can be indexed linguistically, but also such local categories as church or peer group membership (2004: 167 ). That is, in picking such associative or indexical relations out of the flow of social life and talk, actors - both analysts and community members - do not simply perceive but actually in a sense create and re-create categories of speaking and speakers as well as types of sociolinguistic variables. If

2
paper corpusLogostxt47 - : 2.3 Personal pronouns in group membership: the importance of contextual sensitivity

3
paper corpusSignostxt599 - : According to ^[71]Peacock (2006), expressing accepted truth is similar to conveying evidential or implicit truth. Modals (e.g. ‘will’ or ‘must’) or certain phrases (e.g. ‘of course’, ‘clearly’ or ‘obviously’) are often used to express accepted truth, that is, when a claim made is already widely accepted in a particular discipline. Even though the author’s viewpoint is not meant to be involved in such cases, the boosters mentioned “mark involvement and solidarity with an audience, stressing shared information, group membership, and direct engagement with readers” (^[72]Hyland, 1998a: 350 ). The term “solidarity boosters”, introduced by ^[73]Vassileva (2001: 97), reflects more specifically the inclusion of the reader in a scientific or discourse community and his knowledge of the field (^[74]Myers, 1989; ^[75]Harwood, 2005). The examples mentioned previously could also be considered as solidarity boosters depending on the context in which they have been used. Peacock (^[76]2006: 65

Evaluando al candidato group membership:


1) solidarity: 3 (*)
2) boosters: 3
3) categories: 3

group membership
Lengua: eng
Frec: 21
Docs: 12
Nombre propio: / 21 = 0%
Coocurrencias con glosario: 1
Puntaje: 1.792 = (1 + (1+3.32192809488736) / (1+4.4594316186373)));
Candidato aceptado

Referencias bibliográficas encontradas sobre cada término

(Que existan referencias dedicadas a un término es también indicio de terminologicidad.)
group membership
: Abrams, D. & Hogg, M. (2001). Collective identity: Group membership and self conception. In M. Hogg & S. Tindale (Eds.), Blackwell handbook of social psychology: Group processes (pp. 425-460). Oxford: Blackwell.