This book presents a corpus-based study of the language used in business meetings.This book presents a corpus-based study of the language used in business meetings.This book presents a corpus-based study of the language used in business meetings.This innovative volume presents an in-depth study of the language used by participants in business meetings. The cutting-edge research draws on the Cambridge and Nottingham Business English Corpus (CANBEC), a unique resource which brings together meetings of different types both within and between companies, involving speakers whose roles and responsibilities vary, and who represent a range of nationalities and first languages. Keywords, concordance lines and discourse analysis provide thorough insights into aspects such as the structural stages of meetings, participants' discursive practices, interpersonal language and creativity, and power and constraint. The author concludes by making practical suggestions for using these findings to inform the teaching of business English.Series editors' preface; Acknowledgements; Transcription conventions; 1. CANBEC: corpus and context; 1.1. Data collection; 1.2. Corpus constituency; 1.3. Contextual information; 1.4. Transcription and anonymization; 1.5. Corpus size and generalizability; 1.6. Outline of the book; References; 2. Background: theory and methodology; 2.1. Theory; 2.2. Methodology; 2.3. Summary; References; 3. The business-meeting genre: stages and practices; 3.1. Applying Bhatia's multi-perspective model of discourse to business meetings; 3.2. The meeting matrix; 3.3. Applying the meeting matrix; 3.4. Summary; References; 4. Significant meeting words: keywords and concordances; 4.1. Institutional language and everyday English; 4.2. Lexico-grammatical theoretical considerations; 4.3. Word frequencies; 4.4. Keywords; 4.5. Summary; References; 5. Discourse marking and interaction: clusters and practices; 5.1. Defining clusters; 5.2. Clusters in business research; 5.3. Cluster l³&