BiberDouglas. 1984. Pragmatic roles in central Somali narrative discourse. Studies in African Linguistics15(1). 1-26.
3.
BiberDouglas. 1986. Spoken and written textual dimensions in English: Resolving the contradictory findings. Language62(2). 384-414.
4.
BiberDouglas. 1988. Variation across speech and writing. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
5.
BiberDouglas. 1990. Methodological issues regarding corpus-based analyses of linguistic variation. Literary and Linguistic Computing5(4). 257-269.
6.
BiberDouglas. 1993. Representativeness in corpus design. Literary and Linguistic Computing8(4). 243-257.
7.
BiberDouglas. 1994. An analytical framework for register studies. In BiberDouglasFineganEdward (eds.), Sociolinguistic perspectives on register, 31-56. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
8.
BiberDouglas. 1995. Dimensions of register variation: A cross-linguistic comparison. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
9.
BiberDouglas. 2001. Dimensions of variation among eighteenth-century speech-based and written registers. In ConradSusanBiberDouglas (eds.), Variation in English: Multi-dimensional studies, 200-214. London: Longman.
10.
BiberDouglas. 2006. University language: A corpus-based study of spoken and written registers. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
11.
BiberDouglas. 2008. Corpus-based analyses of discourse: Dimensions of variation in conversation. In BhatiaVijayFlowerdewJohnRodneyH. Jones (eds.), Advances in discourse studies, 100-114. London: Routledge.
12.
BiberDouglas. 2009. A corpus-driven approach to formulaic language in English: Multi-word patterns in speech and writing. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics14(3). 275-311.
13.
BiberDouglas. Forthcoming. Using multi-dimensional analysis to explore cross-linguistic universals of register variation. Languages in Contrast.
14.
BiberDouglasBarbieriFederica. 2007. Lexical bundles in university spoken and written registers. English for Specific Purposes26(3). 263-286.
15.
BiberDouglasSusanConradVivianaCortes. 2004. If you look at . . .: Lexical bundles in university teaching and textbooks. Applied Linguistics25(3). 371-405.
16.
BiberDouglasConradSusan M.ReppenRandiByrdPatHeltMarieClarkVictoriaCortesVivianaCsomayEnikoUrzuaAlfredo. 2004. Representing language use in the university: Analysis of the TOEFL 2000 Spoken and Written Academic Language Corpus. TOEFL Monograph Series MS-25. Princeton, NJ: Educational Testing Service.
17.
BiberDouglasDaviesMarkJonesJames K.Tracy-VenturaNicole. 2006. Spoken and written register variation in Spanish: A multi-dimensional analysis. Corpora1(1). 1-37.
18.
BiberDouglasGrayBethany. 2010. Challenging stereotypes about academic writing: Complexity, elaboration, explicitness. Journal of English for Academic Purposes9(1). 2-20.
19.
BiberDouglasGrayBethany. 2011. Grammatical change in the noun phrase: The influence of written language use. English Language and Linguistics15(2). 223-250.
20.
BiberDouglasGrayBethany. 2013. Discourse characteristics of writing and speaking task types on the TOEFL iBT Test: A lexico-grammatical analysis. ETS Research Report RR-13-04, TOEFLiBT-19. Princeton, NJ: Educational Testing Service.
21.
BiberDouglasGrayBethanyPoonponKornwipa. 2011. Should we use characteristics of conversation to measure grammatical complexity in L2 writing development?TESOL Quarterly45(1). 5-35.
22.
BiberDouglasGrayBethanyPoonponKornwipa. 2013. Pay attention to the phrasal structures: Going beyond T-units—A response to WeiWei Yang. TESOL Quarterly47(1). 192–201.
23.
BiberDouglasJohanssonStigLeechGeoffreyConradSusanFineganEdward. 1999. Longman grammar of spoken and written English. London: Longman.
24.
BiberDouglasJonesJames K.2009. Quantitative methods in corpus linguistics. In LüdelingAnkeKytöMerja (eds.), Corpus linguistics: An international handbook, 1286-1304. Berlin: de Gruyter.
25.
BrownPenelopeFraserColin. 1979. Speech as a marker of situation. In SchererKlaus R.GilesHoward (eds.), Social markers in speech, 33-62. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
26.
CarrollJohn B.1960. Vectors of prose style. In SebeokThomas A. (ed.), Style in language, 283-292. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
27.
ChafeWallace. 1982. Integration and involvement in speaking, writing, and oral literature. In TannenDeborah (ed.), Spoken and written language: Exploring orality and literacy, 35-54. Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
28.
ConradSusanBiberDouglas. 2009. Real grammar: A corpus-based approach to English. London: Pearson Longman.
29.
ConradSusanBiberDouglasLeechGeoffrey. 2002. Longman student grammar of spoken and written English. London: Longman.
30.
DaviesMark. 2004-. BYU-BNC (Based on the British National Corpus from Oxford University Press). Available online at http://corpus.byu.edu/bnc/.
31.
DaviesMark. 2007-. Time Magazine Corpus: 100 Million words, 1920s-2000s. Available online at http://corpus.byu.edu/time/.
32.
DaviesMark. 2008-. The Corpus of Contemporary American English: 450 million words, 1990-present. Available online at http://corpus.byu.edu/coca/.
33.
DaviesMark. 2010-. The Corpus of Historical American English: 400 million words, 1810-2009. Available online at http://corpus.byu.edu/coha/.
34.
DaviesMark. 2011-. Google Books Corpus (Based on Google Books n-grams). Available online at http://googlebooks.byu.edu/. Based on: Jean-Baptiste, Michel*, Yuan Kui Shen, Aviva Presser Aiden, Adrian Veres, Matthew K. Gray, The Google Books Team, Joseph P. Pickett, Dale Hoiberg, Dan Clancy, Peter Norvig, Jon Orwant, Steven Pinker, Martin A. Nowak & Erez Lieberman Aiden*. Quantitative Analysis of Culture Using Millions of Digitized Books. Science331 (2011) [Published online ahead of print 12/16/2010].
35.
EgbertJesse. 2012. Style in nineteenth century fiction: A multi-dimensional analysis. Scientific Study of Literature2(2). 167-198.
36.
Ervin-TrippSusan. 1972. On sociolinguistic rules: Alternation and co-occurrence. In GumperzJohn J.HymesDell (eds.), Directions in sociolinguistics, 213-250. New York: Holt.
37.
FriginalEric. 2008. Linguistic variation in the discourse of outsourced call centers. Discourse Studies10(6). 715-736.
38.
GarsideRogerSmithNicholas. 1997. A hybrid grammatical tagger: CLAWS4. In GarsideRogerLeechGeoffreyMcEneryAndrew (eds.), Corpus annotation: Linguistic information from computer text corpora, 102-121. London: Longman.
39.
Goźdź-RoszkowskiStanislaw. 2011. Patterns of linguistic variation in American legal English: A corpus-based study. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.
40.
GrayBethany. 2013. More than discipline: Uncovering multi-dimensional patterns of variation in academic research articles. Corpora. Published electronically November, 2013. doi: 10.3366/cor.2013.0039.
41.
HymesDell. 1974. Foundations in sociolinguistics. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
42.
ParodiGiovanni. 2007. Variation across registers in Spanish. In ParodiGiovanni (ed.), Working with Spanish corpora, 11-53. London: Continuum.
43.
ReppenRandi. 2001. Register variation in student and adult speech and writing. In ConradSusanBiberDouglas (eds.), Variation in English: Multi-dimensional studies, 187-199. London: Longman.