This book is the first to combine interests in two currently popular
approaches to language description, both of which are based on the
observation of naturally-occurring, as opposed to invented, language.
Systemic Functional Linguistics is a theory that focuses on meaning,
choice and probability in language and on language as a social
phenomenon. Corpus Linguistics is a practice, rather than a theory: a
corpus is a large collection of texts that are used as the basis for
language description. It is natural that SFL should turn to corpora as a
source of information about grammatical preference, probability and
variety, and some of the papers in this collection explore this
dimension of the interaction between system and corpus. Conversely,
corpus linguists have made generalisations about language that
contextualize but also challenge the assumptions of SFL. Some of the
papers in the collection expand on this theme. A concluding paper by
M.A.K. Halliday responds to the issues raised. The book will therefore
be of interest to students and researchers involved in either of these
two influential topics in linguistics.