Open Access Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington
Browse

Technical vocabulary in government spoken communications: The team of five million in bubbles, PPE and CBACs

Download (254.37 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-09, 00:07 authored by Averil CoxheadAveril Coxhead
The NewZealand government delivered regular 1 p.m. televised COVID-19 briefings from March 2020. These events had a crucial communicative function and were usually headed by top government and medical officials. This study focuses on technical vocabulary in a corpus made up of these briefings, including single words (grouped into technical word families) and acronyms (e.g., bubble and PPE) as well as the most frequent two to five-word multiword units (MWUs; e.g., case numbers, genomic sequencing, and chains of transmission) containing at least one technical single word family member. The corpus consists of 20 prepared speeches: 10 each in 2020 and 2021 by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Director-General of Health Dr. Ashley Bloomfield (50,782 tokens). The results showed that 6.02% of the single-word families (e.g., outbreak(-s), contact(-s/-less)) in the texts were technical, which may present a challenge for comprehension. Unsurprisingly, the Director-General of Health used moretechnical vocabulary than the Prime Minister. The top 20 MWUs containing technical vocabulary were identified in the corpus. Most were two-word collocations (e.g., negative test, testing centre/s,andnumber of tests). Implications for identifying and dealing with technical vocabulary in both government communications and language education are discussed

History

Preferred citation

Coxhead, A. (2024). Technical vocabulary in government spoken communications: The team of five million in bubbles, PPE and CBACs. International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1-19. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijal.12581

Journal title

International Journal of Applied Linguistics

Publication date

2024-07-08

Pagination

1-19 (19)

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Publication status

Published online

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2024-07-08

ISSN

0802-6106

eISSN

1473-4192

Usage metrics

    Journal articles

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC