Affiliation:
1. University of Helsinki
Abstract
Abstract
In this article, we investigate changes in British parliamentary discourse by using the Hansard Corpus
(1803–2005). Our first goal is to determine whether parliamentary speeches have become colloquialised by studying frequency
changes of select features associated with informal spoken language. Second, by analysing data from the House of Commons and the
House of Lords separately, we show that the texts from the two Houses should be considered distinct sub-registers, each with their
own conventions and development paths. Finally, we analyse a pattern that seems particularly relevant to parliamentary debates:
one where speakers imply disagreement by referring to their peers in the third person, thus circumventing a parliamentary
regulation whereby speakers are prohibited from addressing one another directly. Our findings support the idea of an ongoing
colloquialisation/democratisation trend affecting parliamentary discourse while also suggesting that this process is not entirely
transparent in the written record because of editorial interference.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company