Imperatives and directive strategies /:
Gespeichert in:
Körperschaft: | |
---|---|
Weitere Verfasser: | , |
Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
[2017]
|
Schriftenreihe: | Studies in language companion series ;
v. 184. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Beschreibung: | "This volume emanates from a workshop on imperatives and other directive strategies at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Societas Linguistica Europaea in Split in September 2013 and from an additional call for papers on the topic." |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN: | 9789027265937 9027265933 |
ISSN: | 0165-7763 ; |
Internformat
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505 | 0 | |a Intro -- Imperatives and Directive Strategies -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Imperatives and directive strategies from a functional-typological perspective -- 1. Preliminaries -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 Cross-linguistic characterization -- 2.2 Meaning -- 2.3 Uses -- 2.4 Interaction with other grammatical categories -- 2.5 Contributions to this volume -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Forms -- 3.2 Uses -- 3.3 Imperatives versus other directive strategies -- 3.4 Contributions to this volume -- 4. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Part I. Imperatives -- Imperatives and evidentiality in Innu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Key characteristics of the inflectional verb system of Innu -- 2.1 Three sets of conjugations -- 2.2 Moods and modalities -- 2.3 Evidentiality -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Non-specialized forms -- 3.2 Specialized forms -- 4. An evidential imperative -- 4.1 Previous analyses of imperative 3 -- 4.2 Our analysis of imperative 3 -- 4.3 Argument in favor of our analysis -- 5. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Rhetorical imperatives: Reasons to reasoning -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The syntax and the semantics of regular imperatives -- 2.1 Grammatical properties -- 2.2 Semantic properties -- 2.3 On the relationship between imperatives and modals -- 3. Grammatical properties of RIs -- 3.1 The subject -- 3.2 The verb -- 3.3 Negative polarity items -- 3.4 RIs and regular imperatives -- 4. Semantic properties of RIs -- 4.1 Assertoric potential and polarity -- 4.2 Some consequences of being assertions (and not commands) -- 4.3 The absence of directivity -- 4.4 RIs as reasons for reasoning -- 4.5 RIs as modalized assertions -- 5. RIs as a widening of the domain operation -- 5.1 The widening of the domain operation. | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.2 On the reference of the subject pronoun -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Searching for imperatives in European sign languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Looking for imperatives in sign languages: How to start -- 2.1 Commands? The Polish Sign Language (PJM) experience -- 2.2 Commands are not (necessarily) imperatives -- 2.3 Imperatives are not (necessarily) commands -- 3. The formal properties of imperatives across spoken languages -- 3.1 Null and quantificational subjects in imperatives -- 3.2 A defective paradigm: Exhortative constructions -- 3.3 Reduced morphology -- 3.4 A marked word order -- 3.5 Negation -- 3.6 Embedding -- 3.7 Distinguishing the various uses: Prosody and other markers -- 3.8 Imperative + Declarative: A litmus test for imperative? -- 3.9 Incompatibility with non-volitional verbs -- 4. Modality specificities -- 5. Data elicitation -- 6. Imperatives in Italian Sign Language -- 6.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 6.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 6.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 6.4 Summary -- 7. Imperatives in French Sign Language -- 7.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 7.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 7.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 7.4 Summary -- 8. Imperatives in Catalan Sign Language -- 8.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 8.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 8.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 8.4 Summary -- 9. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Part II. Directive strategies -- "You're just workin' for yourself": Directive strategies in yoga instructional discourse -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Categories of directives in instruction -- 3. Yoga philosophy and yoga instruction -- 4. Data -- 5. Directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 5.1 Bald imperatives -- 5.2 Modified imperatives. | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.3 Incorporated imperatives -- 5.4 Elided verbs -- 5.5 Combinations -- 6. Indirect versus direct directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 7. Discussion: Embodied practice -- 8. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Imperatives and other directives in the Polynesian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Canonical imperatives -- 2.1 Zero-marked imperatives -- 2.2 Particle-marked imperatives -- 2.3 Zero- and particle-marked imperatives -- 2.4 Passive imperatives -- 2.5 Summary of canonical imperatives -- 3. Non-canonical imperatives -- 3.1 First person (inclusive) imperatives -- 3.2 First person inclusive and third person imperatives -- 4. Modifiers in imperatives -- 4.1 Intensifiers -- 4.2 Downtoners -- 5. Other directive structures -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- References -- Directive conditional and complement insubordination in Germanic languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Directive conditional insubordination -- 2.1 Conditional requests -- 2.2 Conditional threats -- 2.3 Summary -- 3. Directive complement insubordination -- 3.1 Direct negotiation: Complement orders and prohibitions -- 3.2 Mediated negotiation: Complement permission and advice -- 3.3 Summary -- 4. Semantic link between conditional and complement directives and conditionality -- 4.1 Conditional directives and conditionality -- 4.2 Complement directives and complementation -- 5. Comparative perspective -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Directive strategies in Modern Korean and Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Commands and requests -- 3. Command and request strategies in Korean -- 3.1 Commands -- 3.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 3.3 Other request expressions -- 4. Command and request strategies in Japanese -- 4.1 Commands -- 4.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 4.3 Other request expressions -- 5. Corpus study -- 5.1 Data. | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.2 Commands -- 5.3 Benefactive request expressions -- 5.4 Formality and age factor -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Eliciting evidence of functional differences: The imperative versus free-standing que- clauses -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a corpus of conversational discourse -- 3. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a questionnaire -- 4. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Crossing the categorial divide: Imperative and interjection conversions in Romance -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 In general -- 2.2 Romance morphology -- 3. Interjections -- 4. The intersection of imperatives and interjections -- 5. Transcategorization between imperatives and interjections in Romance -- 5.1 Imperatives to interjections -- 5.2 Interjections to imperatives -- 6. Diachronic origins of interjections and imperatives -- 6.1 Language evolution and acquisition -- 6.2 Overlap model -- 7. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Index. | |
650 | 0 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Imperative. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056296 | |
650 | 0 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Syntax. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 | |
650 | 0 | |a Functionalism (Linguistics) |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85052322 | |
650 | 0 | |a Discourse analysis. | |
650 | 0 | |a Pragmatics. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85106058 | |
650 | 0 | |a Typology (Linguistics) |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 | |
650 | 6 | |a Impératif (Linguistique) | |
650 | 6 | |a Syntaxe. | |
650 | 6 | |a Fonctionnalisme (Linguistique) | |
650 | 6 | |a Pragmatique. | |
650 | 6 | |a Typologie (Linguistique) | |
650 | 7 | |a pragmatics. |2 aat | |
650 | 7 | |a LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES |x Grammar & Punctuation. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES |x Linguistics |x Syntax. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a Pragmatics |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Discourse analysis |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Functionalism (Linguistics) |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Imperative |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Syntax |2 fast | |
650 | 7 | |a Typology (Linguistics) |2 fast | |
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700 | 1 | |a Heinold, Simone Beatrice, |e editor |e organizer. | |
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contents | Intro -- Imperatives and Directive Strategies -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Imperatives and directive strategies from a functional-typological perspective -- 1. Preliminaries -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 Cross-linguistic characterization -- 2.2 Meaning -- 2.3 Uses -- 2.4 Interaction with other grammatical categories -- 2.5 Contributions to this volume -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Forms -- 3.2 Uses -- 3.3 Imperatives versus other directive strategies -- 3.4 Contributions to this volume -- 4. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Part I. Imperatives -- Imperatives and evidentiality in Innu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Key characteristics of the inflectional verb system of Innu -- 2.1 Three sets of conjugations -- 2.2 Moods and modalities -- 2.3 Evidentiality -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Non-specialized forms -- 3.2 Specialized forms -- 4. An evidential imperative -- 4.1 Previous analyses of imperative 3 -- 4.2 Our analysis of imperative 3 -- 4.3 Argument in favor of our analysis -- 5. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Rhetorical imperatives: Reasons to reasoning -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The syntax and the semantics of regular imperatives -- 2.1 Grammatical properties -- 2.2 Semantic properties -- 2.3 On the relationship between imperatives and modals -- 3. Grammatical properties of RIs -- 3.1 The subject -- 3.2 The verb -- 3.3 Negative polarity items -- 3.4 RIs and regular imperatives -- 4. Semantic properties of RIs -- 4.1 Assertoric potential and polarity -- 4.2 Some consequences of being assertions (and not commands) -- 4.3 The absence of directivity -- 4.4 RIs as reasons for reasoning -- 4.5 RIs as modalized assertions -- 5. RIs as a widening of the domain operation -- 5.1 The widening of the domain operation. 5.2 On the reference of the subject pronoun -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Searching for imperatives in European sign languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Looking for imperatives in sign languages: How to start -- 2.1 Commands? The Polish Sign Language (PJM) experience -- 2.2 Commands are not (necessarily) imperatives -- 2.3 Imperatives are not (necessarily) commands -- 3. The formal properties of imperatives across spoken languages -- 3.1 Null and quantificational subjects in imperatives -- 3.2 A defective paradigm: Exhortative constructions -- 3.3 Reduced morphology -- 3.4 A marked word order -- 3.5 Negation -- 3.6 Embedding -- 3.7 Distinguishing the various uses: Prosody and other markers -- 3.8 Imperative + Declarative: A litmus test for imperative? -- 3.9 Incompatibility with non-volitional verbs -- 4. Modality specificities -- 5. Data elicitation -- 6. Imperatives in Italian Sign Language -- 6.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 6.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 6.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 6.4 Summary -- 7. Imperatives in French Sign Language -- 7.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 7.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 7.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 7.4 Summary -- 8. Imperatives in Catalan Sign Language -- 8.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 8.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 8.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 8.4 Summary -- 9. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Part II. Directive strategies -- "You're just workin' for yourself": Directive strategies in yoga instructional discourse -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Categories of directives in instruction -- 3. Yoga philosophy and yoga instruction -- 4. Data -- 5. Directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 5.1 Bald imperatives -- 5.2 Modified imperatives. 5.3 Incorporated imperatives -- 5.4 Elided verbs -- 5.5 Combinations -- 6. Indirect versus direct directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 7. Discussion: Embodied practice -- 8. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Imperatives and other directives in the Polynesian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Canonical imperatives -- 2.1 Zero-marked imperatives -- 2.2 Particle-marked imperatives -- 2.3 Zero- and particle-marked imperatives -- 2.4 Passive imperatives -- 2.5 Summary of canonical imperatives -- 3. Non-canonical imperatives -- 3.1 First person (inclusive) imperatives -- 3.2 First person inclusive and third person imperatives -- 4. Modifiers in imperatives -- 4.1 Intensifiers -- 4.2 Downtoners -- 5. Other directive structures -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- References -- Directive conditional and complement insubordination in Germanic languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Directive conditional insubordination -- 2.1 Conditional requests -- 2.2 Conditional threats -- 2.3 Summary -- 3. Directive complement insubordination -- 3.1 Direct negotiation: Complement orders and prohibitions -- 3.2 Mediated negotiation: Complement permission and advice -- 3.3 Summary -- 4. Semantic link between conditional and complement directives and conditionality -- 4.1 Conditional directives and conditionality -- 4.2 Complement directives and complementation -- 5. Comparative perspective -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Directive strategies in Modern Korean and Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Commands and requests -- 3. Command and request strategies in Korean -- 3.1 Commands -- 3.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 3.3 Other request expressions -- 4. Command and request strategies in Japanese -- 4.1 Commands -- 4.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 4.3 Other request expressions -- 5. Corpus study -- 5.1 Data. 5.2 Commands -- 5.3 Benefactive request expressions -- 5.4 Formality and age factor -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Eliciting evidence of functional differences: The imperative versus free-standing que- clauses -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a corpus of conversational discourse -- 3. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a questionnaire -- 4. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Crossing the categorial divide: Imperative and interjection conversions in Romance -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 In general -- 2.2 Romance morphology -- 3. Interjections -- 4. The intersection of imperatives and interjections -- 5. Transcategorization between imperatives and interjections in Romance -- 5.1 Imperatives to interjections -- 5.2 Interjections to imperatives -- 6. Diachronic origins of interjections and imperatives -- 6.1 Language evolution and acquisition -- 6.2 Overlap model -- 7. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Index. |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)973159719 |
dewey-full | 415/.6 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 415 - Grammar |
dewey-raw | 415/.6 |
dewey-search | 415/.6 |
dewey-sort | 3415 16 |
dewey-tens | 410 - Linguistics |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft |
format | Electronic eBook |
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Preliminaries -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 Cross-linguistic characterization -- 2.2 Meaning -- 2.3 Uses -- 2.4 Interaction with other grammatical categories -- 2.5 Contributions to this volume -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Forms -- 3.2 Uses -- 3.3 Imperatives versus other directive strategies -- 3.4 Contributions to this volume -- 4. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Part I. Imperatives -- Imperatives and evidentiality in Innu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Key characteristics of the inflectional verb system of Innu -- 2.1 Three sets of conjugations -- 2.2 Moods and modalities -- 2.3 Evidentiality -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Non-specialized forms -- 3.2 Specialized forms -- 4. An evidential imperative -- 4.1 Previous analyses of imperative 3 -- 4.2 Our analysis of imperative 3 -- 4.3 Argument in favor of our analysis -- 5. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Rhetorical imperatives: Reasons to reasoning -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The syntax and the semantics of regular imperatives -- 2.1 Grammatical properties -- 2.2 Semantic properties -- 2.3 On the relationship between imperatives and modals -- 3. Grammatical properties of RIs -- 3.1 The subject -- 3.2 The verb -- 3.3 Negative polarity items -- 3.4 RIs and regular imperatives -- 4. Semantic properties of RIs -- 4.1 Assertoric potential and polarity -- 4.2 Some consequences of being assertions (and not commands) -- 4.3 The absence of directivity -- 4.4 RIs as reasons for reasoning -- 4.5 RIs as modalized assertions -- 5. RIs as a widening of the domain operation -- 5.1 The widening of the domain operation.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5.2 On the reference of the subject pronoun -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Searching for imperatives in European sign languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Looking for imperatives in sign languages: How to start -- 2.1 Commands? The Polish Sign Language (PJM) experience -- 2.2 Commands are not (necessarily) imperatives -- 2.3 Imperatives are not (necessarily) commands -- 3. The formal properties of imperatives across spoken languages -- 3.1 Null and quantificational subjects in imperatives -- 3.2 A defective paradigm: Exhortative constructions -- 3.3 Reduced morphology -- 3.4 A marked word order -- 3.5 Negation -- 3.6 Embedding -- 3.7 Distinguishing the various uses: Prosody and other markers -- 3.8 Imperative + Declarative: A litmus test for imperative? -- 3.9 Incompatibility with non-volitional verbs -- 4. Modality specificities -- 5. Data elicitation -- 6. Imperatives in Italian Sign Language -- 6.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 6.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 6.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 6.4 Summary -- 7. Imperatives in French Sign Language -- 7.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 7.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 7.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 7.4 Summary -- 8. Imperatives in Catalan Sign Language -- 8.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 8.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 8.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 8.4 Summary -- 9. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Part II. Directive strategies -- "You're just workin' for yourself": Directive strategies in yoga instructional discourse -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Categories of directives in instruction -- 3. Yoga philosophy and yoga instruction -- 4. Data -- 5. Directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 5.1 Bald imperatives -- 5.2 Modified imperatives.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5.3 Incorporated imperatives -- 5.4 Elided verbs -- 5.5 Combinations -- 6. Indirect versus direct directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 7. Discussion: Embodied practice -- 8. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Imperatives and other directives in the Polynesian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Canonical imperatives -- 2.1 Zero-marked imperatives -- 2.2 Particle-marked imperatives -- 2.3 Zero- and particle-marked imperatives -- 2.4 Passive imperatives -- 2.5 Summary of canonical imperatives -- 3. Non-canonical imperatives -- 3.1 First person (inclusive) imperatives -- 3.2 First person inclusive and third person imperatives -- 4. Modifiers in imperatives -- 4.1 Intensifiers -- 4.2 Downtoners -- 5. Other directive structures -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- References -- Directive conditional and complement insubordination in Germanic languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Directive conditional insubordination -- 2.1 Conditional requests -- 2.2 Conditional threats -- 2.3 Summary -- 3. Directive complement insubordination -- 3.1 Direct negotiation: Complement orders and prohibitions -- 3.2 Mediated negotiation: Complement permission and advice -- 3.3 Summary -- 4. Semantic link between conditional and complement directives and conditionality -- 4.1 Conditional directives and conditionality -- 4.2 Complement directives and complementation -- 5. Comparative perspective -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Directive strategies in Modern Korean and Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Commands and requests -- 3. Command and request strategies in Korean -- 3.1 Commands -- 3.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 3.3 Other request expressions -- 4. Command and request strategies in Japanese -- 4.1 Commands -- 4.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 4.3 Other request expressions -- 5. Corpus study -- 5.1 Data.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5.2 Commands -- 5.3 Benefactive request expressions -- 5.4 Formality and age factor -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Eliciting evidence of functional differences: The imperative versus free-standing que- clauses -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a corpus of conversational discourse -- 3. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a questionnaire -- 4. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Crossing the categorial divide: Imperative and interjection conversions in Romance -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 In general -- 2.2 Romance morphology -- 3. Interjections -- 4. The intersection of imperatives and interjections -- 5. Transcategorization between imperatives and interjections in Romance -- 5.1 Imperatives to interjections -- 5.2 Interjections to imperatives -- 6. Diachronic origins of interjections and imperatives -- 6.1 Language evolution and acquisition -- 6.2 Overlap model -- 7. 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genre | Electronic book. |
genre_facet | Electronic book. |
id | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn973159719 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-11-27T13:27:40Z |
institution | BVB |
institution_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2017009052 |
isbn | 9789027265937 9027265933 |
issn | 0165-7763 ; |
language | English |
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oclc_num | 973159719 |
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owner_facet | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
physical | 1 online resource |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBA |
publishDate | 2017 |
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publisher | John Benjamins Publishing Company, |
record_format | marc |
series | Studies in language companion series ; |
series2 | Studies in language companion series (SLCS), |
spelling | Imperatives and directive strategies / edited by Daniël Van Olmen, Simone Heinold. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2017] 1 online resource text txt rdacontent computer n rdamedia online resource nc rdacarrier Studies in language companion series (SLCS), 0165-7763 ; volume 184 "This volume emanates from a workshop on imperatives and other directive strategies at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Societas Linguistica Europaea in Split in September 2013 and from an additional call for papers on the topic." Includes bibliographical references and index. Print version record and CIP data provided by publisher. Intro -- Imperatives and Directive Strategies -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Imperatives and directive strategies from a functional-typological perspective -- 1. Preliminaries -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 Cross-linguistic characterization -- 2.2 Meaning -- 2.3 Uses -- 2.4 Interaction with other grammatical categories -- 2.5 Contributions to this volume -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Forms -- 3.2 Uses -- 3.3 Imperatives versus other directive strategies -- 3.4 Contributions to this volume -- 4. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Part I. Imperatives -- Imperatives and evidentiality in Innu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Key characteristics of the inflectional verb system of Innu -- 2.1 Three sets of conjugations -- 2.2 Moods and modalities -- 2.3 Evidentiality -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Non-specialized forms -- 3.2 Specialized forms -- 4. An evidential imperative -- 4.1 Previous analyses of imperative 3 -- 4.2 Our analysis of imperative 3 -- 4.3 Argument in favor of our analysis -- 5. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Rhetorical imperatives: Reasons to reasoning -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The syntax and the semantics of regular imperatives -- 2.1 Grammatical properties -- 2.2 Semantic properties -- 2.3 On the relationship between imperatives and modals -- 3. Grammatical properties of RIs -- 3.1 The subject -- 3.2 The verb -- 3.3 Negative polarity items -- 3.4 RIs and regular imperatives -- 4. Semantic properties of RIs -- 4.1 Assertoric potential and polarity -- 4.2 Some consequences of being assertions (and not commands) -- 4.3 The absence of directivity -- 4.4 RIs as reasons for reasoning -- 4.5 RIs as modalized assertions -- 5. RIs as a widening of the domain operation -- 5.1 The widening of the domain operation. 5.2 On the reference of the subject pronoun -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Searching for imperatives in European sign languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Looking for imperatives in sign languages: How to start -- 2.1 Commands? The Polish Sign Language (PJM) experience -- 2.2 Commands are not (necessarily) imperatives -- 2.3 Imperatives are not (necessarily) commands -- 3. The formal properties of imperatives across spoken languages -- 3.1 Null and quantificational subjects in imperatives -- 3.2 A defective paradigm: Exhortative constructions -- 3.3 Reduced morphology -- 3.4 A marked word order -- 3.5 Negation -- 3.6 Embedding -- 3.7 Distinguishing the various uses: Prosody and other markers -- 3.8 Imperative + Declarative: A litmus test for imperative? -- 3.9 Incompatibility with non-volitional verbs -- 4. Modality specificities -- 5. Data elicitation -- 6. Imperatives in Italian Sign Language -- 6.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 6.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 6.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 6.4 Summary -- 7. Imperatives in French Sign Language -- 7.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 7.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 7.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 7.4 Summary -- 8. Imperatives in Catalan Sign Language -- 8.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 8.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 8.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 8.4 Summary -- 9. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Part II. Directive strategies -- "You're just workin' for yourself": Directive strategies in yoga instructional discourse -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Categories of directives in instruction -- 3. Yoga philosophy and yoga instruction -- 4. Data -- 5. Directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 5.1 Bald imperatives -- 5.2 Modified imperatives. 5.3 Incorporated imperatives -- 5.4 Elided verbs -- 5.5 Combinations -- 6. Indirect versus direct directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 7. Discussion: Embodied practice -- 8. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Imperatives and other directives in the Polynesian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Canonical imperatives -- 2.1 Zero-marked imperatives -- 2.2 Particle-marked imperatives -- 2.3 Zero- and particle-marked imperatives -- 2.4 Passive imperatives -- 2.5 Summary of canonical imperatives -- 3. Non-canonical imperatives -- 3.1 First person (inclusive) imperatives -- 3.2 First person inclusive and third person imperatives -- 4. Modifiers in imperatives -- 4.1 Intensifiers -- 4.2 Downtoners -- 5. Other directive structures -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- References -- Directive conditional and complement insubordination in Germanic languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Directive conditional insubordination -- 2.1 Conditional requests -- 2.2 Conditional threats -- 2.3 Summary -- 3. Directive complement insubordination -- 3.1 Direct negotiation: Complement orders and prohibitions -- 3.2 Mediated negotiation: Complement permission and advice -- 3.3 Summary -- 4. Semantic link between conditional and complement directives and conditionality -- 4.1 Conditional directives and conditionality -- 4.2 Complement directives and complementation -- 5. Comparative perspective -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Directive strategies in Modern Korean and Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Commands and requests -- 3. Command and request strategies in Korean -- 3.1 Commands -- 3.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 3.3 Other request expressions -- 4. Command and request strategies in Japanese -- 4.1 Commands -- 4.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 4.3 Other request expressions -- 5. Corpus study -- 5.1 Data. 5.2 Commands -- 5.3 Benefactive request expressions -- 5.4 Formality and age factor -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Eliciting evidence of functional differences: The imperative versus free-standing que- clauses -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a corpus of conversational discourse -- 3. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a questionnaire -- 4. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Crossing the categorial divide: Imperative and interjection conversions in Romance -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 In general -- 2.2 Romance morphology -- 3. Interjections -- 4. The intersection of imperatives and interjections -- 5. Transcategorization between imperatives and interjections in Romance -- 5.1 Imperatives to interjections -- 5.2 Interjections to imperatives -- 6. Diachronic origins of interjections and imperatives -- 6.1 Language evolution and acquisition -- 6.2 Overlap model -- 7. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Index. Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056296 Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 Functionalism (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85052322 Discourse analysis. Pragmatics. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85106058 Typology (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 Impératif (Linguistique) Syntaxe. Fonctionnalisme (Linguistique) Pragmatique. Typologie (Linguistique) pragmatics. aat LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. bisacsh Pragmatics fast Discourse analysis fast Functionalism (Linguistics) fast Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative fast Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax fast Typology (Linguistics) fast Electronic book. Van Olmen, Daniël, editor organizer. Heinold, Simone Beatrice, editor organizer. Societas Linguistica Europaea. Meeting (46th : 2013 : Split, Croatia) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2017009052 Print version: Imperatives and directive strategies. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2017] 9789027259493 (DLC) 2016055674 Studies in language companion series ; v. 184. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42023920 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1481857 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Imperatives and directive strategies / Studies in language companion series ; Intro -- Imperatives and Directive Strategies -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Imperatives and directive strategies from a functional-typological perspective -- 1. Preliminaries -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 Cross-linguistic characterization -- 2.2 Meaning -- 2.3 Uses -- 2.4 Interaction with other grammatical categories -- 2.5 Contributions to this volume -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Forms -- 3.2 Uses -- 3.3 Imperatives versus other directive strategies -- 3.4 Contributions to this volume -- 4. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Part I. Imperatives -- Imperatives and evidentiality in Innu -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Key characteristics of the inflectional verb system of Innu -- 2.1 Three sets of conjugations -- 2.2 Moods and modalities -- 2.3 Evidentiality -- 3. Directive strategies -- 3.1 Non-specialized forms -- 3.2 Specialized forms -- 4. An evidential imperative -- 4.1 Previous analyses of imperative 3 -- 4.2 Our analysis of imperative 3 -- 4.3 Argument in favor of our analysis -- 5. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Rhetorical imperatives: Reasons to reasoning -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The syntax and the semantics of regular imperatives -- 2.1 Grammatical properties -- 2.2 Semantic properties -- 2.3 On the relationship between imperatives and modals -- 3. Grammatical properties of RIs -- 3.1 The subject -- 3.2 The verb -- 3.3 Negative polarity items -- 3.4 RIs and regular imperatives -- 4. Semantic properties of RIs -- 4.1 Assertoric potential and polarity -- 4.2 Some consequences of being assertions (and not commands) -- 4.3 The absence of directivity -- 4.4 RIs as reasons for reasoning -- 4.5 RIs as modalized assertions -- 5. RIs as a widening of the domain operation -- 5.1 The widening of the domain operation. 5.2 On the reference of the subject pronoun -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Searching for imperatives in European sign languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Looking for imperatives in sign languages: How to start -- 2.1 Commands? The Polish Sign Language (PJM) experience -- 2.2 Commands are not (necessarily) imperatives -- 2.3 Imperatives are not (necessarily) commands -- 3. The formal properties of imperatives across spoken languages -- 3.1 Null and quantificational subjects in imperatives -- 3.2 A defective paradigm: Exhortative constructions -- 3.3 Reduced morphology -- 3.4 A marked word order -- 3.5 Negation -- 3.6 Embedding -- 3.7 Distinguishing the various uses: Prosody and other markers -- 3.8 Imperative + Declarative: A litmus test for imperative? -- 3.9 Incompatibility with non-volitional verbs -- 4. Modality specificities -- 5. Data elicitation -- 6. Imperatives in Italian Sign Language -- 6.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 6.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 6.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 6.4 Summary -- 7. Imperatives in French Sign Language -- 7.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 7.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 7.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 7.4 Summary -- 8. Imperatives in Catalan Sign Language -- 8.1 Manual markers of the imperative -- 8.2 Non-manual markers of the imperative -- 8.3 Testing specific properties of the imperative -- 8.4 Summary -- 9. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Part II. Directive strategies -- "You're just workin' for yourself": Directive strategies in yoga instructional discourse -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Categories of directives in instruction -- 3. Yoga philosophy and yoga instruction -- 4. Data -- 5. Directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 5.1 Bald imperatives -- 5.2 Modified imperatives. 5.3 Incorporated imperatives -- 5.4 Elided verbs -- 5.5 Combinations -- 6. Indirect versus direct directives in yoga instructional discourse -- 7. Discussion: Embodied practice -- 8. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Imperatives and other directives in the Polynesian languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Canonical imperatives -- 2.1 Zero-marked imperatives -- 2.2 Particle-marked imperatives -- 2.3 Zero- and particle-marked imperatives -- 2.4 Passive imperatives -- 2.5 Summary of canonical imperatives -- 3. Non-canonical imperatives -- 3.1 First person (inclusive) imperatives -- 3.2 First person inclusive and third person imperatives -- 4. Modifiers in imperatives -- 4.1 Intensifiers -- 4.2 Downtoners -- 5. Other directive structures -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- References -- Directive conditional and complement insubordination in Germanic languages -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Directive conditional insubordination -- 2.1 Conditional requests -- 2.2 Conditional threats -- 2.3 Summary -- 3. Directive complement insubordination -- 3.1 Direct negotiation: Complement orders and prohibitions -- 3.2 Mediated negotiation: Complement permission and advice -- 3.3 Summary -- 4. Semantic link between conditional and complement directives and conditionality -- 4.1 Conditional directives and conditionality -- 4.2 Complement directives and complementation -- 5. Comparative perspective -- 6. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Directive strategies in Modern Korean and Japanese -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Commands and requests -- 3. Command and request strategies in Korean -- 3.1 Commands -- 3.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 3.3 Other request expressions -- 4. Command and request strategies in Japanese -- 4.1 Commands -- 4.2 Benefactive request expressions -- 4.3 Other request expressions -- 5. Corpus study -- 5.1 Data. 5.2 Commands -- 5.3 Benefactive request expressions -- 5.4 Formality and age factor -- 6. Conclusion -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Eliciting evidence of functional differences: The imperative versus free-standing que- clauses -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a corpus of conversational discourse -- 3. Imperatives versus free-standing que-clauses in a questionnaire -- 4. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Crossing the categorial divide: Imperative and interjection conversions in Romance -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Imperatives -- 2.1 In general -- 2.2 Romance morphology -- 3. Interjections -- 4. The intersection of imperatives and interjections -- 5. Transcategorization between imperatives and interjections in Romance -- 5.1 Imperatives to interjections -- 5.2 Interjections to imperatives -- 6. Diachronic origins of interjections and imperatives -- 6.1 Language evolution and acquisition -- 6.2 Overlap model -- 7. Conclusions -- Abbreviations -- References -- Index. Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056296 Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 Functionalism (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85052322 Discourse analysis. Pragmatics. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85106058 Typology (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 Impératif (Linguistique) Syntaxe. Fonctionnalisme (Linguistique) Pragmatique. Typologie (Linguistique) pragmatics. aat LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. bisacsh Pragmatics fast Discourse analysis fast Functionalism (Linguistics) fast Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative fast Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax fast Typology (Linguistics) fast |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056296 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85052322 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85106058 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 |
title | Imperatives and directive strategies / |
title_auth | Imperatives and directive strategies / |
title_exact_search | Imperatives and directive strategies / |
title_full | Imperatives and directive strategies / edited by Daniël Van Olmen, Simone Heinold. |
title_fullStr | Imperatives and directive strategies / edited by Daniël Van Olmen, Simone Heinold. |
title_full_unstemmed | Imperatives and directive strategies / edited by Daniël Van Olmen, Simone Heinold. |
title_short | Imperatives and directive strategies / |
title_sort | imperatives and directive strategies |
topic | Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056296 Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056338 Functionalism (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85052322 Discourse analysis. Pragmatics. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85106058 Typology (Linguistics) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85139174 Impératif (Linguistique) Syntaxe. Fonctionnalisme (Linguistique) Pragmatique. Typologie (Linguistique) pragmatics. aat LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. bisacsh Pragmatics fast Discourse analysis fast Functionalism (Linguistics) fast Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative fast Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax fast Typology (Linguistics) fast |
topic_facet | Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative. Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax. Functionalism (Linguistics) Discourse analysis. Pragmatics. Typology (Linguistics) Impératif (Linguistique) Syntaxe. Fonctionnalisme (Linguistique) Pragmatique. Typologie (Linguistique) pragmatics. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Grammar & Punctuation. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Syntax. Pragmatics Discourse analysis Grammar, Comparative and general Imperative Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Electronic book. |
url | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1481857 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT vanolmendaniel imperativesanddirectivestrategies AT heinoldsimonebeatrice imperativesanddirectivestrategies AT societaslinguisticaeuropaeameeting imperativesanddirectivestrategies |