Research Article

Underproduction or Overproduction? A Corpus-based Study of Chinese EFL Learners’ Use of English Relative Clauses

Authors

  • Nyasha Malbermore Chandavengerwa School of Foreign Languages, Jiangsu University, 301 Xuefu Road, Zhenjiang 212013, P.R. China.
  • Tawanda Matende Department of Communication and Applied Language Studies, University of Venda, South Africa.

Abstract

This paper attempts to examine whether Chinese English learners adopt the underproduction or overproduction behavior when using English relative clauses in academic writing. To achieve the objective of the study, the researchers used a corpus-based method to analyze and compare the production of the restrictive relative clause among Chinese students and native English students. The aims were to find out if the Chinese students underproduce the English relative clause and also examine how frequently they use that, which, and zero relative pronouns as reported in the sub-corpus of the Written English Corpus of Chinese Learner (WECCL) and the British Academic Written English corpus (BAWE). Based on the findings, conclusions are drawn as follows; compared to native English students, Chinese EFL learners generally tend to underproduce the restrictive relative clause in academic writing; and on the other hand, overuse the relative pronoun that. The observations from this study concur with the findings from previous studies. 

Article information

Journal

International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation

Volume (Issue)

3 (3)

Pages

122-130

Published

2020-03-30

How to Cite

Chandavengerwa, N. M. ., & Matende, T. . (2020). Underproduction or Overproduction? A Corpus-based Study of Chinese EFL Learners’ Use of English Relative Clauses. International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation, 3(3), 122–130. Retrieved from https://al-kindipublisher.com/index.php/ijllt/article/view/1112

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Keywords:

English relative clause; underproduction; overproduction; academic writing