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2017 BYU L. Rev. 1417 (2017)
Ordinary Meaning and Corpus Linguistics

handle is hein.journals/byulr2017 and id is 1447 raw text is: 








Ordinary Meaning and Corpus Linguistics


                'Stefan Th. Gries* & Brian G. Slocum**

    This Article discusses how corpus analysis, and similar empirically
 based methods of language study, can help inform judicial assessments
 about language  meaning.   We first briefly outline our view of legal
 language and  interpretation in order to underscore the importance of
 the ordinary meaning  doctrine, and thus the relevance of tools such as
 corpus analysis, to legal interpretation. Despite the heterogeneity of the
 judicial interpretive process, and the importance of the specific context
 relevant to the statute at issue, conventions of meaning that cut across
 contexts are a necessary aspect of legal interpretation. Because ordinary
 meaning  must  in some sense be generalizable across contexts, it would
 seem to be subject in some way to the empirical verification that corpus
 analysis can provide.
     We demonstrate the potential of corpus analysis through the study of
 two rather infamous cases in which the reviewing courts made various
general claims about language  meaning.  In both cases, United States v.
Costello and  Smith v. United States, the courts made statements about
language  that are contradicted by corpus analysis. We also demonstrate
the potential of corpus analysis through Hart's no-vehicles-in-the-park
hypothetical. A discussion of how to approach Hart's hypothetical shows
the potential but also the complexities of the kind of linguistic analyses
required by such scenarios. Corpus linguistics can yield results that are
relevant to legal interpretation, but performing the necessary analyses is
complex   and   requires sinificant  training  in  order  to perform
competently.  We  conclude that while it is doubtful that judges  will
themselves  become   proficient at   corpus  linguistics, they should
be  receptive to the expert testimony  of corpus linguists in approp-
riate circumstances.




      t The order of authors is alphabetical.
      * Stefan Th. Gries, Professor of Linguistics, University of California, Santa Barbara.
      ** Brian G. Slocum, Professor of Law, University of the Pacific, McGeorge School
of Law.


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