| Zurich English Newspaper CorpusThe Zurich English Newspaper Corpus (ZEN) is a collection of early English newspaper texts from the late 17th and 18th centuries. It is a corpus specifically designed for linguists who want to study the history of the English language. The Zen Corpus mirrors the extraordinary diversification of newspapers in the 18th century. It includes a wide variety of (mainly) London newspapers, selected in 10-year intervals from 1661 onwards, covering most of the text-classes available (foreign news, home news, shipping news, crime, births, weddings, death notices, lost and found, proclamations, advertisements). It excludes lists of names, lists of stocks, and poetry.  Project leader:  Udo FriesTime of compilation: 1993–2003
 Size: 1.6 million words
 Language: English
 Number of texts: 349 newspaper issues
 Period: 1661–1791
 Released: 2004
 Funding:  Stiftung für Wissenschaftliche Forschung, Universität Zürich; 
			      Schweizerischer Nationalfonds
 Project home page: http://es-zen.unizh.ch
 Reference lines and copyrightZEN, Zurich English Newspaper CorpusVersion 1.0. English Department of the University of Zurich. http://es-zen.unizh.ch. ManualLehmann, Hans Martin, Caren auf dem Keller, Beni Ruef. 2006. Zen Corpus 1.0. In: Roberta Facchinetti and Matti Rissanen (eds.), Corpus-based Studies of Diachronic English. 135-155. (Linguistic Insights 31.) Bern: Peter Lang. AnnotationA description is given in:Lehmann, Hans Martin, Caren auf dem Keller, Beni Ruef. 2006. Zen Corpus 1.0. In: Roberta Facchinetti and Matti Rissanen (eds.), Corpus-based Studies of Diachronic English. 135-155. (Linguistic Insights 31.) Bern: Peter Lang.
 CompilersUdo Fries, Hans Martin Lehmann, Beni Ruef, Peter Schneider, Patrick Studer, Caren auf dem Keller, Beat Nietlispach, Sandra Engler, Sabine Hensel, Franziska Zeller AvailabilityFor free online use or CD-ROM write to Hans Martin Lehmann, hmlehman@es.uzh.ch.     CoRD Entry submitted on January 16, 2009 by Prof. em. Udo Fries, University of Zurich.Information for the entry was edited by Prof. em. Udo Fries.
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