Survey of English Usage

The Survey of English Usage was the first research centre in Europe to carry out research with corpora. The Survey is based in the Department of English Language and Literature at University College London.

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Randolph Quirk - Survey of English Usage
... Davy and David Crystal, conducted an ambitious project known as the Survey of English Usage ... This compilation of a large body of English language data (a corpus) comprised one million words as recorded in actual use in everyday life ... to be the foundation of A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language, a reference grammar widely used around the world ...
Survey Of English Usage - Current Research - Linguistic Research With Corpora
... tools to the corpus linguistics research community, the SEU carries out research into English language ... Recent projects include research on the English Noun Phrase, Subordination in Spoken and Written English, and the English Verb Phrase ... The Survey also provides support for PhD students who carry out research into English language corpora ...

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    By contrast with history, evolution is an unconscious process. Another, and perhaps a better way of putting it would be to say that evolution is a natural process, history a human one.... Insofar as we treat man as a part of nature—for instance in a biological survey of evolution—we are precisely not treating him as a historical being. As a historically developing being, he is set over against nature, both as a knower and as a doer.
    Owen Barfield (b. 1898)

    Pythagoras, Locke, Socrates—but pages
    Might be filled up, as vainly as before,
    With the sad usage of all sorts of sages,
    Who in his life-time, each was deemed a bore!
    The loftiest minds outrun their tardy ages.
    George Gordon Noel Byron (1788–1824)

    By contrast with history, evolution is an unconscious process. Another, and perhaps a better way of putting it would be to say that evolution is a natural process, history a human one.... Insofar as we treat man as a part of nature—for instance in a biological survey of evolution—we are precisely not treating him as a historical being. As a historically developing being, he is set over against nature, both as a knower and as a doer.
    Owen Barfield (b. 1898)

    An English family consists of a few persons, who, from youth to age, are found revolving within a few feet of each other, as if tied by some invisible ligature, tense as that cartilage which we have seen attaching the two Siamese.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)