A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse - The Intonation of Increments
48 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse 2.3.5 Summary This section has suggested a number of points which need to be integrated ...
Chapter 3 The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar Chapter 3 situates the assumptions which underpin Brazil’s grammar within ...
50 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse a number of problems, Sperber and Wilson’s theory of relevance provides a useful theore ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 51 Yet within a given context a hearer of the utterances in (1) understands that th ...
52 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse Labov makes no predictions about either the grammatical or prosodic form of A-events, B ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 53 To illustrate, imagine a man who has never tasted a papaya. Based upon his commu ...
54 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse argue that speakers only need to check back three levels. Mutual know- ledge is secured ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 55 The man has evidence that the woman knows that the painting is a Picasso. If pri ...
56 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse a particular feature on B’s map. He provides example (5) as support (ibid. 38). B B/A B ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 57 Sperber and Wilson (1995: 20) argue that the requirement of mutual or shared kno ...
58 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse Sperber and Wilson’s proposal neatly solves the problem of solipsism implicit in accoun ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 59 between the interlocutors communication is likely to fail. As a result, some sch ...
60 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse In the course of his investigation, Austin (1975) realized that all utterances can be v ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 61 (3) Commissives: which commit the hearer to undertake the course of action repre ...
62 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse indirect means of achieving the speaker’s ends. Here the speaker desires warmth; the di ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 63 Phonetically, the contradiction contour is a high fall from elephantiasis follow ...
64 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse and argue that if (12) has a fall on California it is a literal question but if it has ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 65 Sincerity condition S wants this information. Essential condition Counts as an a ...
66 A Grammar of Spoken English Discourse Tench (1996: 39) states that tag questions with checking tags have falling intonation w ...
The Psychological Foundations of the Grammar 67 ‘speakers characteristically pursu[ing] their purposes with respect to a second ...
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