Conversational routines in English: convention and creativity
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Longman
1996
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Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Studies in language and linguistics
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVI, 251 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0582082129 0582082110 |
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adam_text |
Titel: Conversational routines in English
Autor: Aijmer, Karin
Jahr: 1996
Contents Preface xiii Acknowledgements xvi Chapter One: Introduction 1 1.1 Aim and scope of the present study 1 1.2 Material and method 3 1.3 Frequency of conversational routines in spoken language 6 1.4 Psychological aspects of conversational routines 7 1.5 Conversational routines and ritualization 9 1.6 Lexicalization, grammaticalization and idiomatization 10 1.7 Conversational routines and meaning 11 1.8 Criteria of fixedness 12 1.8.1 Repetitive phrases and pragmatic idioms 13 1.8.2. Prosodic fixedness 14 1.9 The processing of conversational routines 15 1.10 Routines and discourse 17 1.11 Conversational routines and grammatical analysis 18 1.11.1 Grammatical deficiency 18 1.11.2 Syntactic integration and position 19 1.12 A model for describing the structural flexibility of conversational routines 21 1.13 The pragmatic function of conversational routines 24 1.13.1 Conversational routines and illocutionary force 24 1.13.2 Indirect speech acts 24 vii
CONTENTS 1.13.3 Conventionalization of indirect speech acts 25 1.14 The pragmatics of conversational routines 26 1.14.1 Conversational routines and frames 26 1.14.2 Factors of speech-act frames 27 1.15 Conversational routines and language teaching 28 Chapter Two: Thanking 33 2.1 Introduction 33 2.2 Thank you/thanks as an illocutionary force indicating device 34 2.3 Thanking and politeness 35 2.4 Strategies of thanking 35 2.5 Gratitude expressions 39 2.6 Continuation patterns 39 2.7 The grammatical analysis of gratitude expressions 41 2.8 Prosody and fixedness 41 2.9 Distribution of thanking over different texts 42 2.10 Thank you / thanks as stems 44 2.10.1 Expanded forms of thanking 45 2.10.2 Thanking and intensification 46 2.10.3 Prosody and intensification 47 2.10.4 Patterns of compound thanks 48 2.11 The functions of gratitude expressions 51 2.11.1 Thanking and ritualization 51 2.12 Thanking as a discourse marker 52 2.12.1 Thanking as a closing signal in adjacency triplets 54 2.12.2 Thanking in proposal-acceptance sequences 56 2.12.3 Thanking in telephone closings 58 2.12.4 Thanking in different turn positions 65 2.13 The pragmatics of thanking 66 2.13.1 The constraints caused by the object of gratitude 66 2.14 Frames for thanking 75 2.14.1 Variation in standard situations 77 2.15 Conclusion 78 Chapter Three: Apologies 80 3.1 Introduction 80 3.2 Defining apologies 81 3.3 Apologizing strategies 82 viii
CONTENTS 3.4 The form of apologizing 84 3.5 Continuation patterns 87 3.6 The grammatical analysis of apology expressions 88 3.7 Apologies and prosody 88 3.8 Distribution of apologies over different texts 89 3.9 Collocational fixedness and flexibility 91 3.9.1 Fully expanded apology expressions 91 3.9.2 Apologizing and intensification 93 3.9.3 Prosodic devices emphasizing the politeness expressed by the apology 94 3.9.4 Compound apologies 94 3.10 Apologies and function 97 3.11 Retrospective and anticipatory apologies 98 3.11.1 Disarming apologies 100 3.11.1.1 Disarmers and corrections 102 3.11.1.2 Disarmers as requests for repetition 102 3.11.1.3 Disarmers in dispreferred responses 103 3.12 The structural function of apologies 106 3.12.1 Apologies in telephone openings 106 3.12.2 Apologies in telephone closings 106 3.13 The type of offence 108 3.13.1 Talk offences 109 3.13.2 Time offences 114 3.13.3 Space offences 115 3.13.4 Offences involving social behaviour 115 3.13.5 Offences involving inconvenience 116 3.14 Apologies and pragmatic frames 118 3.14.1 Frames for standard situations 119 3.15 Conclusion 121 Chapter Four: Requests and offers 124 4.1 Introduction 124 4.2 The speech act assignment mechanism and indirect speech acts 124 4.3 Indirect speech acts and pragmatic principles 126 4.4 Indirect speech acts and implicature 127 4.5 Pragmatic ambiguity 128 4.6 Defining requests 129 4.7 Requestive strategies 130 4.8 A taxonomy of requests 131 ix
CONTENTS 4.8.1 Requestives, advisories and offers 134 4.8.2 Explicit and implicit indirect requests 136 4.9 Requests and politeness 139 4.9.1 Assertive and tentative indirect requests 140 4.9.2 Requests and style 141 4.10 Continuation patterns 142 4.11 The grammatical analysis of requestive routines 144 4.12 Describing request expressions 145 4.12.1 Prosodic modification 145 4.12.2 Requests and discourse type 146 4.13 Indirect requests and speech act stems 147 4.14 Types of stem 148 4.14.1 Mitigated indirect requests in the form of declarative sentences 149 4.14.2 Want and need statements 154 4.14.3 Mitigated indirect requests in the form of interrogative sentences 156 4.14.3.1 Can/could you 157 4.14.3.2 Wili/would you 159 4.14.3.3 Requests in the form of permission questions 161 4.15 Lexical mitigating devices 163 4.15.1 Please 166 4.15.2 Just 169 4.16 Internal and external modifiers 170 4.16.1 Requests and external modifiers 170 4.16.2 Combinations of modifiers 174 4.17 Referential strategies 175 4.18 Requests and pragmatic conventions 177 4.18.1 Requests and the situation 178 4.18.2 Frames for requests 180 4.19 Imperatives 182 4.19.1 Imperatives and politeness 183 4.19.1.1 Do + imperative 186 4.19.1.2 You + imperative 187 4.20 Patterns expressing offers 189 4.21 Conclusion 195 Chapter Five: Discourse markers as conversational routines 200 5.1 Introduction 200 5.2 Coherence and discourse markers 201 5.3 Discourse markers characterized 203 5.4 The metalinguistic function 206 x
CONTENTS 5.5 Relevance theory and communication 208 5.5.1 The interpretation of discourse markers in relevance theory 209 5.6 The approach to discourse markers in this work 211 5.7 The linguistic properties of discourse markers 211 5.7.1 The discourse marker slot' 212 5.7.2 Prosodic fixedness 216 5.7.3 Positional fixedness 216 5.7.4 The grammatical analysis of discourse markers as stems 217 5.8 Contextual properties of discourse markers 218 5.8.1 Discourse markers as deictic 'pointers' referring backwards and forwards in the discourse 218 5.8.2 Discourse markers and person deixis 220 5.9 Functional properties of discourse markers 221 5.9.1 Global and local discourse markers 221 5.9.1.1 The pragmatic functions expressed by local discourse markers 222 5.9.1.2 Functions of global discourse markers 226 5.10 Combinations in the discourse marker slot 229 5.11 Discourse markers and cognitive frames 231 5.12 Conclusion 232 References 235 Index 246 xi
Contents Preface Acknowledgements xiü xvi Chapter One: Introduction 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 Aim and scope of the present study Material and method Frequency of conversational routines in spoken language Psychological aspects of conversational routines Conversational routines and ritualization Lexicalization, grammaticalization and idiomatization Conversational routines and meaning Criteria of fixedness 1.8.1 Repetitive phrases and pragmatic idioms 1.8.2 . Prosodic fixedness The processing of conversational routines Routines and discourse Conversational routines and grammatical analysis 1.11.1 Grammatical deficiency 1.11.2 Syntactic integration and position A model for describing the structural flexibility of conversational routines The pragmatic function of conversational routines 1.13.1 Conversational routines and illocutionary force 1.13.2 Indirect speech acts 1 1 3 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 17 18 18 19 21 24 24 24 vii
CONTENTS 1.13.3 Conventionalization of indirect speech acts 1.14 The pragmatics of conversational routines 1.14.1 Conversational routines and frames 1.14.2 Factors of speech-act frames 1.15 Conversational routines and language teaching CHAPTER TWO: Thanking Introduction Thank you/thanks as an illocutionary force indicating device 2.3 Thanking and politeness 2.4 Strategies of thanking 2.5 Gratitude expressions 2.6 Continuation patterns 2.7 The grammatical analysis of gratitude expressions 2.8 Prosody and fixedness 2.9 Distribution of thanking over different texts 2.10 Thank you/thanks as stems 2.10.1 Expanded forms of thanking 2.10.2 Thanking and intensification 2.10.3 Prosody and intensification 2.10.4 Patterns of compound thanks 2.11 The functions of gratitude expressions 2.11.1 Thanking and ritualization 2.12 Thanking as a discourse marker 2.12.1 Thanking as a closing signal in adjacency triplets 2.12.2 Thanking in proposal-acceptance sequences 2.12.3 Thanking in telephone closings 2.12.4 Thanking in different turn positions 2.13 The pragmatics of thanking 2.13.1 The constraints caused by the object of gratitude 2.14 Frames for thanking 2.14.1 Variation in standard situations 2.15 Conclusion 2.1 2.2 CHAPTER THREE: Apologies 3.1 3.2 3.3 viii Introduction Defining apologies Apologizing strategies 33 33 34 35 35 39 39 41 41 42 44 45 46 47 48 51 51 52 54 56 58 65 66 66 75 77 78 80 80 81 82
CONTENTS 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 З.П 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 The form of apologizing Continuation patterns The grammatical analysis of apology expressions Apologies and prosody Distribution of apologies over different texts Collocational fixedness and flexibility 3.9.1 Fully expanded apology expressions 3.9.2 Apologizing and intensification 3.9.3 Prosodic devices emphasizing the politeness expressed by the apology 3.9.4 Compound apologies Apologies and function Retrospective and anticipatory apologies 3.11.1 Disarming apologies 3.11.1.1 Disarmers and corrections 3.11.1.2 Disarmers as requests for repetition 3.11.1.3 Disarmers in dispreferred responses The structural function of apologies 3.12.1 Apologies in telephone openings 3.12.2 Apologies in telephone closings The type of offence 3.13.1 Talk offences 3.13.2 Time offences 3.13.3 Space offences 3.13.4 Offences involving social behaviour 3.13.5 Offences involving inconvenience Apologies and pragmatic frames 3.14.1 Frames for standard situations Conclusion Chapter Four: Requests and offers 4.1 Introduction 4.2 The speech act assignment mechanism and indirect speech acts 4.3 Indirect speech acts and pragmatic principles 4.4 Indirect speech acts and implicature 4.5 Pragmatic ambiguity 4.6 Defining requests 4.7 Requestive strategies 4.8 A taxonomy of requests 84 87 88 88 89 91 91 93 94 94 97 98 100 102 102 103 106 106 106 108 109 114 115 115 116 118 119 121 124 124 124 126 127 128 129 130 131
CONTENTS 4.8.1 Requestives, advisories and offers 4.8.2 Explicit and implicit indirect requests 4.9 Requests and politeness 4.9.1 Assertive and tentative indirect requests 4.9.2 Requests and style 4.10 Continuation patterns 4.11 The grammatical analysis of requestive routines 4.12 Describing request expressions 4.12.1 Prosodic modification 4.12.2 Requests and discourse type 4.13 Indirect requests and speech act stems 4.14 Types of stem 4.14.1 Mitigated indirect requests in the form of declarative sentences 4.14.2 Want and need statements 4.14.3 Mitigated indirect requests in the form of interrogative sentences 4.14.3.1 Сап/could you 4.14.3.2 Will/would you 4.14.3.3 Requests in the form of permission questions 4.15 Lexical mitigating devices 4.15.1 Please 4.15.2 Just 4.16 Internal and external modifiers 4.16.1 Requests and external modifiers 4.16.2 Combinations of modifiers 4.17 Referential strategies 4.18 Requests and pragmatic conventions 4.18.1 Requests and the situation 4.18.2 Frames for requests 4.19 Imperatives 4.19.1 Imperatives and politeness 4.19.1.1 Do + imperative 4.19.1.2 You + imperative 4.20 Patterns expressing offers 4.21 Conclusion CHAPTER X Five: Discourse markers as conversational routines 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Coherence and discourse markers 5.3 Discourse markers characterized 5.4 The metalinguistic function 134 136 139 140 141 142 144 145 145 146 147 148 149 154 156 157 159 161 163 166 169 170 170 174 175 177 178 180 182 183 186 187 189 195 200 200 201 203 206
CONTENTS Relevance theory and communication 208 5.5.1 The interpretation of discourse markers in relevance theory 209 5.6 The approach to discourse markers in this work 211 5.7 The linguistic properties of discourse markers 211 5.7.1 The discourse marker slot' 212 5.7.2 Prosodic fixedness 216 5.7.3 Positional fixedness 216 5.7.4 The grammatical analysis of discourse markers as stems 217 5.8 Contextual properties of discourse markers 218 5.8.1 Discourse markers as deictic 'pointers' referring backwards and forwards in the discourse218 5.8.2 Discourse markers and person deixis 220 5.9 Functional properties of discourse markers 221 5.9.1 Global and local discourse markers 221 5.9.1.1 The pragmatic functions expressed by local discourse markers222 5.9.1.2 Functions of global discourse markers 226 5.10 Combinations in the discourse marker slot 229 5.11 Discourse markers and cognitive frames 231 5.12 Conclusion 232 5.5 References Index 235 246 xi |
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Aijmer, Karin 1939- |
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record_format | marc |
series2 | Studies in language and linguistics |
spelling | Aijmer, Karin 1939- Verfasser (DE-588)133896889 aut Conversational routines in English convention and creativity Karin Aijmer 1. publ. London [u.a.] Longman 1996 XVI, 251 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Studies in language and linguistics Englisch English language -- Spoken English English language -- Discourse analysis English language -- Prosodic analysis Computational linguistics Conversation Semiotics Illokutiver Akt (DE-588)4122213-1 gnd rswk-swf Konversationsanalyse (DE-588)4114283-4 gnd rswk-swf Umgangssprache (DE-588)4061588-1 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf Phraseologie (DE-588)4076108-3 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s Umgangssprache (DE-588)4061588-1 s Phraseologie (DE-588)4076108-3 s DE-604 Konversationsanalyse (DE-588)4114283-4 s Illokutiver Akt (DE-588)4122213-1 s HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=007426470&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=007426470&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Aijmer, Karin 1939- Conversational routines in English convention and creativity Englisch English language -- Spoken English English language -- Discourse analysis English language -- Prosodic analysis Computational linguistics Conversation Semiotics Illokutiver Akt (DE-588)4122213-1 gnd Konversationsanalyse (DE-588)4114283-4 gnd Umgangssprache (DE-588)4061588-1 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Phraseologie (DE-588)4076108-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4122213-1 (DE-588)4114283-4 (DE-588)4061588-1 (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4076108-3 |
title | Conversational routines in English convention and creativity |
title_auth | Conversational routines in English convention and creativity |
title_exact_search | Conversational routines in English convention and creativity |
title_full | Conversational routines in English convention and creativity Karin Aijmer |
title_fullStr | Conversational routines in English convention and creativity Karin Aijmer |
title_full_unstemmed | Conversational routines in English convention and creativity Karin Aijmer |
title_short | Conversational routines in English |
title_sort | conversational routines in english convention and creativity |
title_sub | convention and creativity |
topic | Englisch English language -- Spoken English English language -- Discourse analysis English language -- Prosodic analysis Computational linguistics Conversation Semiotics Illokutiver Akt (DE-588)4122213-1 gnd Konversationsanalyse (DE-588)4114283-4 gnd Umgangssprache (DE-588)4061588-1 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd Phraseologie (DE-588)4076108-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Englisch English language -- Spoken English English language -- Discourse analysis English language -- Prosodic analysis Computational linguistics Conversation Semiotics Illokutiver Akt Konversationsanalyse Umgangssprache Phraseologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=007426470&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=007426470&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT aijmerkarin conversationalroutinesinenglishconventionandcreativity |
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Inhaltsverzeichnis