Signum: Estudos da Linguagem (Apr 2017)

LEXICAL DENSITY IN SCHOOL WRITTEN TEXTS

  • Mário Martins

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 218 – 240

Abstract

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This article presents a correlational study between lexical density and school progression in texts written by school age children and adolescents, monolingual speakers of European Portuguese. The measure used to assess lexical density is the ratio of lexical words to the total number of words (global density), as proposed by Ure (1971). This measure is complemented by the ratio of specific word classes (name, verb, adjective and adverb) to the total number of words. Using IMS Open Corpus Workbench tool, this measures was extracted from a quasi-longitudinal corpus consisting of 244 texts of narrative (n = 122) and argumentative (n = 122) register, written by students in the 5th (n = 26), the 7th (n = 46) and 10th (n = 50) year of the Portuguese basic schooling system. The results show that there are no correlations between global lexical density and school progression in both registers. Regarding specific lexical density, it was found that, in one hand, there is a positive correlation between nominal density and progression and, on the other hand, there is a negative correlation between verbal density and progression. This work aims to contribute to a more detailed understanding of the lexical development of children and adolescents written language across school progression.

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