学术英语写作

韩吉峰

目录

  • 1 学术英语写作与发表
    • 1.1 What is Academic Writing
    • 1.2 Academic Style
    • 1.3 What is academic vocabulary?
    • 1.4 Academic Word List
    • 1.5 Academic Collocation List
    • 1.6 Academic Idioms
    • 1.7 Cohesion and Coherence
    • 1.8 Transition signal in academic writing
    • 1.9 How to Improve Your English Writing
    • 1.10 How to Answer IELTS Writing Task 1 General.mp4
    • 1.11 7-Ways to Improve English Writing Skills IELTS EXAM ESSAY ACADEMIC
    • 1.12 How to write a perfect CV résumé in English
    • 1.13 How to write a perfect cover letter in English
  • 2 国际学术会议交流英语
    • 2.1 ON PRESENTATION
    • 2.2 Rules of public speech
    • 2.3 如何主持英文会议和小组讨论
    • 2.4 用英语主持会议的40个基本短语
    • 2.5 如何开一场英文会议?
    • 2.6 英语会议常用句(套路)
    • 2.7 线上会议常用表达方式
    • 2.8 怎么主持一次会议
    • 2.9 用英语主持会议必须有的策略和例句
    • 2.10 开英语会议不知道如何遣词造句
    • 2.11 如何做一个大家拍手称赞的英文汇报?自信presentation的7个建议
    • 2.12 如何以英语在国际学术会议上交流
    • 2.13 如何用英语谈论表格
    • 2.14 报告环节常用词
  • 3 “中国科学家精神”等 思政资源库
    • 3.1 中国科学家
    • 3.2 ON LANGUAGE LEARNING
    • 3.3 ON SUCCESS
    • 3.4 ON HAPPINESS
    • 3.5 ON LOVE
    • 3.6 ON SELF-DISCIPLINE
    • 3.7 ON VIRUS
    • 3.8 ON EDUCATION
    • 3.9 ON DEMOCRACY
    • 3.10 ON FUTURE
    • 3.11 ON JUSTICE
  • 4 科技翻译
    • 4.1 The application of “with” in EST&CET
    • 4.2 The application of “to infinitive” in EST&CET
    • 4.3 The application of “ Passive voice” in EST&CET
    • 4.4 The application of “which” in EST&CET4 &6
    • 4.5 The application of “  parenthesis插入语” in EST&CET
Academic Idioms

Academic Idioms

Although it is often assumed that idioms are too informal for use inacademic English, two studies have identified idioms which occur fairlyfrequently in spoken and written academic English. This page describes idiomsin academic English, giving information on what an idiom is, why academic idioms should be studied, as well as a list of academic idioms for spoken andwritten English from a recent study of idioms (Miller, 2019), giving first background to the creation of the list and finally the list itself.

What is an idiom?

For another lookat the same content, check out the video on YouTube (also available on Youku). There is a worksheet (with answers and teacher's notes) for this video.

An idiom is a fixed, well-established, multi-wordexpression, the meaning of which is not deducible from the individual words.The following are some examples of idioms in everyday (not academic)English.

  • Raining cats     and dogs - raining very hard

  • Break a leg -     said before a performance, meaning 'good luck'

  • Behind one's     back - secretly

The following are some examples of idioms for academic English use (a complete list is given below).

  • On the other hand  - from another point of view (showing contrast)

  • Bear in mind      - think of something, especially as a warning

  • The bottom line   - the main or essential point

  • Take on board     - accept or deal with (a problem or idea)


Why study academic idioms?

Idioms are common in everyday spoken and written English. Although it isoften assumed that idioms are too informal for use in academic English,two studies (Simpson and Mendis, 2003, and Miller, 2019) have identified idioms which are used in academic contexts, morecommonly in spoken academic contexts though also in academic writing. InMiller's study, idioms in spoken academic texts, including repetitions,occurred with a frequency of 835 per million words, or close to 0.1%. Whilethis figure is not as high as, say, words in the Academic Word List (10%) or the Academic Collocations List (1.4%), productive knowledge of idioms will assiststudents in becoming part of the academic discourse community, while receptiveknowledge will aid them in understanding spoken or written texts.

 

Miller reports that idioms may sometimes be signposted by lecturers (e.g.via the phrase as it were) or writers (e.g. via the phrase as theysay or by use of quotation marks). However, these methods do not alwayssignal idiom use, do not help students to understand the meaning of idioms, andin fact add a layer of complexity to academic English study (in terms of what asit were and as they say mean and why quotation marks are used inthat way).



Academic Idioms List: background to the list

The list of academic idioms (below) comes from the study by Julia Miller (2019), which used two academic English corpuses: the British AcademicSpoken English (BASE) corpus for spoken texts (lectures and seminars), and theOxford Corpus of Academic English (OCAE) corpus for written texts. Only idiomswith a frequency of more than 1.2 per million words (pmw) in the BASE areincluded.

 

The range of idiom use is shown by the number of texts in which each idiomoccurs, as well as the number of faculties (i.e. disciplinary groups) itoccurs in. Miller's study used four such faculties, namely Social Sciences(which had the highest idiom use with 234 pmw), Arts and Humanities (which had191 idioms pmw), Life and Medical Sciences (183 pmw), and Physical Sciences(which had the least frequent use, 76 pmw).

 

Most idioms in the list occur in more than one faculty, meaning they aresuitable for study by all students of academic English. The most frequent idiomused in only one faculty, gold standard (24th most frequent idiom inspoken academic English and 10th most frequent in written academic English),was used only in the Life Sciences (medical articles).



Academic Idioms List: Written

The list below gives written academic idioms from the OCAE (OxfordCorpus of Academic English) corpus, listed in order of frequency. There are 38idioms in total. There is a separate version of 170 idioms for spoken academicEnglish (use the button above the table). Hyperlinks of definitions are includedfor some of the idioms.

 Written idioms


 

Number

 
 

Idiom

 
 

Spoken frequency per million words (BASE)

 
 

Written frequency per million words (OCAE)

 
 

Number of texts in which the idiom occurs 

 
 

Number of faculties in which the idiom occurs 

 
 

1

 
 

on the other hand

 
 

64.11

 
 

88.12

 
 

30

 
 

4

 
 

2

 
 

in (the) light of

 
 

5.39

 
 

34.99

 
 

8

 
 

3

 
 

3

 
 

on the one hand

 
 

37.74

 
 

31.87

 
 

30

 
 

4

 
 

4

 
 

on the other [hand]

 
 

10.19

 
 

20.34

 
 

12

 
 

3

 
 

5

 
 

in the hands of

 
 

6.59

 
 

12.54

 
 

10

 
 

3

 
 

6

 
 

bear in mind

 
 

46.73

 
 

10.17

 
 

42

 
 

4

 
 

7

 
 

in its own right

 
 

5.99

 
 

9.27

 
 

10

 
 

4

 
 

8

 
 

along the lines of

 
 

6.59

 
 

9.24

 
 

9

 
 

3

 
 

9

 
 

in the long run

 
 

5.39

 
 

7.84

 
 

9

 
 

4

 
 

10

 
 

gold standard

 
 

5.39

 
 

6.66

 
 

6

 
 

1

 
 

11

 
 

a step further/back

 
 

7.19

 
 

6.21

 
 

12

 
 

4

 
 

12

 
 

driving force

 
 

5.39

 
 

6.21

 
 

8

 
 

4

 
 

13

 
 

the balance of power

 
 

10.78

 
 

6.20

 
 

8

 
 

2

 
 

14

 
 

come into play

 
 

5.39

 
 

4.26

 
 

8

 
 

3

 
 

15

 
 

in the short run

 
 

3.00

 
 

4.19

 
 

2

 
 

2

 
 

16

 
 

last resort

 
 

3.00

 
 

4.05

 
 

5

 
 

2

 
 

17

 
 

rule of thumb

 
 

1.20

 
 

2.98

 
 

2

 
 

2

 
 

18

 
 

golden age

 
 

3.00

 
 

2.96

 
 

3

 
 

2

 
 

19

 
 

bad news

 
 

5.39

 
 

2.75

 
 

8

 
 

4

 
 

20

 
 

go hand in hand with

 
 

3.59

 
 

2.68

 
 

5

 
 

3

 
 

21

 
 

on one hand

 
 

1.80

 
 

2.58

 
 

3

 
 

2

 
 

22

 
 

on the face of it

 
 

5.39

 
 

2.57

 
 

8

 
 

4

 
 

23

 
 

the bottom line

 
 

8.39

 
 

2.50

 
 

8

 
 

4

 
 

24

 
 

in the early days

 
 

3.59

 
 

2.33

 
 

5

 
 

4

 
 

25

 
 

beg the question

 
 

2.40

 
 

2.18

 
 

2

 
 

2

 
 

26

 
 

from scratch

 
 

3.59

 
 

1.86

 
 

6

 
 

3

 
 

27

 
 

go without saying

 
 

4.79

 
 

1.85

 
 

6

 
 

2

 
 

28

 
 

trial and error

 
 

4.79

 
 

1.85

 
 

5

 
 

3

 
 

29

 
 

bridge the gap

 
 

3.59

 
 

1.85

 
 

6

 
 

3

 
 

30

 
 

get to grips with

 
 

3.59

 
 

1.78

 
 

4

 
 

3

 
 

31

 
 

a fair share

 
 

1.20

 
 

1.55

 
 

2

 
 

1

 
 

32

 
 

the high point

 
 

2.40

 
 

1.52

 
 

4

 
 

2

 
 

33

 
 

the whole story

 
 

2.40

 
 

1.41

 
 

3

 
 

3

 
 

34

 
 

at the end of the day

 
 

14.98

 
 

1.36

 
 

13

 
 

4

 
 

35

 
 

state of the art

 
 

4.19

 
 

1.36

 
 

4

 
 

2

 
 

36

 
 

behind the scenes

 
 

2.40

 
 

1.36

 
 

3

 
 

2

 
 

37

 
 

the big picture

 
 

3.59

 
 

1.30

 
 

6

 
 

3

 
 

38

 
 

across the board

 
 

5.99

 
 

1.21

 
 

7

 
 

3

 



Spoken idioms

 

Number

Idiom

Spoken frequency per million words (BASE)

Written frequency per million words (OCAE)

Number of texts in which the idiom occurs 

Number of faculties in which the idiom occurs 

1

on the other hand

64.11

88.12

30

4

2

bear in mind

46.73

10.17

42

4

3

on the one hand

37.74

31.87

30

4

4

the balance of power

10.78

6.20

8

2

5

at the end of the day

14.98

1.36

13

4

6

on the other [hand]

10.19

20.34

12

3

7

the bottom line

8.39

2.50

8

4

8

take on board

7.79

0.00

13

4

9

by and large

7.19

0.04

12

4

10

a step further/back

7.19

6.21

12

4

11

take for granted

7.19

0.01

9

3

12

in the hands of

6.59

12.54

10

3

13

along the lines of

6.59

9.24

9

3

14

in its own right

5.99

9.27

10

4

15

across the board

5.99

1.21

7

3

16

at the back of one's mind

5.99

0.30

4

2

17

sit on the fence

5.99

0.12

2

2

18

in the long run

5.39

7.84

9

4

19

bad news

5.39

2.75

8

4

20

driving force

5.39

6.21

8

4

21

on the face of it

5.39

2.57

8

4

22

in (the) light of

5.39

34.99

8

3

23

come into play

5.39

4.26

8

3

24

gold standard

5.39

6.66

6

1

25

what on earth

4.79

0.17

7

3

26

go without saying

4.79

1.85

6

2

27

trial and error

4.79

1.85

5

3

28

down the line

4.19

0.08

7

3

29

over the top

4.19

0.05

6

3

30

state of the art

4.19

1.36

4

2

31

the man/woman in the street

4.19

0.28

3

3

32

stepping stone

4.19

0.66

2

1

33

from scratch

3.59

1.86

6

3

34

bridge the gap

3.59

1.85

6

3

35

the big picture

3.59

1.30

6

3

36

in the early days

3.59

2.33

5

4

37

get one's head (a) round

3.59

0.02

5

4

38

go hand in hand with

3.59

2.68

5

3

39

keep an eye on

3.59

0.78

5

3

40

hang on a minute

3.59

0.04

5

2

41

on the spot

3.59

0.84

4

4

42

get to grips with

3.59

1.78

4

3

43

go through the roof

3.59

0.06

4

2

44

full circle

3.00

0.54

5

3

45

that's another story

3.00

0.27

5

3

46

how on earth

3.00

0.08

5

3

47

cast one's mind back

3.00

0.04

5

3

48

last resort

3.00

4.05

5

2

49

the other side of the coin

3.00

0.54

5

2

50

ring a bell

3.00

0.15

5

1

51

good old days

3.00

0.27

4

3

52

grey area

3.00

0.60

4

2

53

out of the blue

3.00

0.05

3

3

54

golden age

3.00

2.96

3

2

55

touchy-feely

3.00

0.05

3

1

56

in the short run

3.00

4.19

2

2

57

spring to mind

2.40

0.31

4

3

58

on the right track

2.40

0.28

4

3

59

have a stab at

2.40

0.25

4

3

60

get the picture

2.40

0.08

4

3

61

the high point

2.40

1.52

4

2

62

it's early days

2.40

0.01

4

2

63

the whole story

2.40

1.41

3

3

64

do the job

2.40

0.63

3

3

65

move the goalposts

2.40

0.08

3

3

66

behind the scenes

2.40

1.36

3

2

67

in the pipeline

2.40

0.31

3

2

68

on the back burner

2.40

0.11

3

2

69

bog standard

2.40

0.02

3

2

70

out of one's hands

2.40

0.00

3

2

71

call the cavalry

2.40

0.00

3

2

72

beg the question

2.40

2.18

2

2

73

get something straight

2.40

0.05

2

2

74

play ball

2.40

0.05

2

1

75

boil down to

1.80

1.13

3

3

76

in store

1.80

0.34

3

3

77

make up one's own mind

1.80

0.20

3

3

78

have up one's sleeve

1.80

0.12

3

3

79

go down that route

1.80

0.09

3

3

80

get one's act together

1.80

0.08

3

3

81

on one hand

1.80

2.58

3

2

82

overall picture

1.80

1.14

3

2

83

golden rule

1.80

1.05

3

2

84

have a life of its own

1.80

0.89

3

2

85

turn something on its head

1.80

0.76

3

2

86

fall into place

1.80

0.30

3

2

87

so far so good

1.80

0.23

3

2

88

on one's hands

1.80

0.11

3

2

89

in the same boat

1.80

0.09

3

2

90

take home message

1.80

0.11

3

1

91

joe public

1.80

0.04

3

1

92

kicking and screaming

1.80

0.02

3

1

93

rule of thumb

1.20

2.98

2

2

94

hot spots

1.80

0.94

2

2

95

ring true

1.80

0.30

2

2

96

put your finger on

1.80

0.24

2

2

97

get a handle on

1.80

0.21

2

2

98

shut up shop

1.80

0.01

2

2

99

set something in stone

1.80

0.12

2

1

100

swings and roundabouts

1.80

0.02

2

1

101

go in one ear and out the other

1.80

0.00

2

1

102

in a nutshell

1.20

1.17

2

2

103

fall foul of

1.20

1.15

2

2

104

set the scene

1.20

1.15

2

2

105

have the upper hand

1.20

0.88

2

2

106

on the side

1.20

0.84

2

2

107

make up one's mind

1.20

0.76

2

2

108

fly in the face of

1.20

0.71

2

2

109

get carried away

1.20

0.65

2

2

110

moot point

1.20

0.47

2

2

111

someone's bread and butter

1.20

0.38

2

2

112

stand to reason

1.20

0.38

2

2

113

devil's advocate

1.20

0.37

2

2

114

get one's message across

1.20

0.30

2

2

115

deliver the goods

1.20

0.23

2

2

116

a bad press

1.20

0.19

2

2

117

the powers that be

1.20

0.18

2

2

118

set foot in

1.20

0.14

2

2

119

happily ever after

1.20

0.11

2

2

120

shift gears

1.20

0.11

2

2

121

get down to the nitty gritty

1.20

0.09

2

2

122

in one's sights

1.20

0.08

2

2

123

brain power

1.20

0.07

2

2

124

not to mince one's words

1.20

0.06

2

2

125

throw somebody in at the deep end

1.20

0.06

2

2

126

cover one's bases

1.20

0.06

2

2

127

weird and wonderful

1.20

0.06

2

2

128

cast an eye over

1.20

0.06

2

2

129

above one's station

1.20

0.05

2

2

130

have a go

1.20

0.02

2

2

131

in the same ballpark

1.20

0.02

2

2

132

pat on the back

1.20

0.02

2

2

133

sit on one's hands

1.20

0.02

2

2

134

throw up one's hands

1.20

0.02

2

2

135

watch this space

1.20

0.02

2

2

136

go down the road of

1.20

0.01

2

2

137

this that and the other

1.20

0.01

2

2

138

get cracking

1.20

0.01

2

2

139

give someone a shout

1.20

0.01

2

2

140

have a crack at

1.20

0.01

2

2

141

not to put too fine a point on it

1.20

0.01

2

2

142

give the game away

1.20

0.01

2

2

143

beat/get the hell out of something

1.20

0.00

2

2

144

get a move on

1.20

0.00

2

2

145

get one's thoughts together

1.20

0.00

2

2

146

hand on heart

1.20

0.00

2

2

147

quote somebody on something

1.20

0.00

2

2

148

put one's head above the parapet

1.20

0.00

2

2

149

a fair share

1.20

1.55

2

1

150

to say the least

1.20

1.10

2

1

151

grass roots movement

1.20

0.65

2

1

152

pick and choose

1.20

0.47

2

1

153

sow seeds of thought

1.20

0.37

2

1

154

at loggerheads

1.20

0.24

2

1

155

drag one's feet

1.20

0.21

2

1

156

in the driving seat

1.20

0.17

2

1

157

go back to square one

1.20

0.08

2

1

158

set in tablets of stone

1.20

0.07

2

1

159

dear to one's heart

1.20

0.06

2

1

160

off the top of one's head

1.20

0.05

2

1

161

end of story

1.20

0.05

2

1

162

in a rut

1.20

0.04

2

1

163

tick the boxes

1.20

0.04

2

1

164

round robin

1.20

0.02

2

1

165

dig one's heels in

1.20

0.02

2

1

166

stretch one's legs

1.20

0.02

2

1

167

get someone on board

1.20

0.00

2

1

168

on that note

1.20

0.00

2

1

169

tail end Charlie

1.20

0.00

2

1

170

jump up and down

1.20

0.00

2

1



References

Miller, J. (2019) 'The bottom line: Are idioms used in English academicspeech and writing?', Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 43(2020) 100810. Available online at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeap.2019.100810.

Simpson, R., and Mendis, D. (2003) 'A corpus-based study of idioms inacademic speech', Tesol Quarterly, 37(3), 419e441. Available online at: https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/90255/3588398.pdf?sequence=1.