Ke Simp Ulan

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KESIMPULAN

From the above conclusions can be drawn As a big country, Indonesia has a big number of
journals. To ensure the quality of the journals, the directorate of higher education of Indonesia
regularly evaluate the journals and assign an accredited status for the journals that have passed
the evaluation process. In 2017, when the corpus data were collected, there were 247
accredited journals in Indonesia. A substantial number of these journals published articles in
English. Some of them can also refer to very specific subject fields. For the corpus data, we
selected 75 journal titles which published articles in Indonesian and close to the four
classifications of disciplines mentioned above. To ensure the provision of a good range of data,
only 10–30 articles were downloaded from each journal. However, the number of journals in
Social sciences is bigger than that of the other disciplines and it also tends to have longer texts
than the others. Consequently, the number of tokens for the social sciences is a bigger
proportion than that in the other disciplines. The recapitulation of the corpus data from the
Indonesian accredited journal articles is shown in Table 1.
As shown in Table 1, the total size of the corpus is about 3.7 million running words. All of these
Indonesian journal articles are open access articles, so they can be downloaded for free. Each
article contains approximately 2000–5000 words. All the texts from the articles were put in the
corpus. However, non-content text data, such as author names, acknowledgments, and
references, was deleted, because they do not represent the use of Indonesian academic
language. The deletion or the cleaning process was recommended by many experts (e.g.
Gauvain, Lamel & Eskénazi, 1990; [7]) to guarantee the validity and reliability of the corpus
data.
The case for the theses is different from that of the journal articles

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