A New Architecture for Functional Grammar (Functional Grammar Series)

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FG and the dynamics of discourse 235


  1. Mackenzie and Keizer (1991: 194) and Hannay (1991: 138) consider New-
    Tops as a subcategory of Focus, i.e. Presentative Focus.

  2. In this connection Mackenzie and Keizer (1991: 187) argue, for example,
    that not all GivTops need be contextually given, or introduced into the dis-
    course by means of a NewTop, but can also be situationally given
    (Situationally GivTops) or generally given (Generally GivTops): e.g. Watch
    out! The ceiling is caving in!). Similarly, it seems that not all inferrable
    elements are inferred from a GivTop or fulfil a SubTopic function, for many
    inferrable elements may also act as NewTops. These may be new at the con-
    textual level but given or inferrable with regard to the addressee`s general or
    situational pragmatic information: e.g., What did you see in the circus?
    Well, there was an elephant that amazed us with his tricks....

  3. Note, however, that D-Topic relationships may also hold between nominal
    expressions.

  4. In FG ‘focality’ encompasses “those pieces of information which are the
    most important or salient with respect to the modifications which S [...]
    wishes to effect in P [....], and with respect to the further development of the
    discourse” (Dik 1997: 312).

  5. Worthy of mention here is Lambrecht’s (1994: 97) differentiation of activa-
    tion accent and Focus accent in that a point of prosodic prominence is not
    necessarily an indicator of either a Focus relation or inactiveness of a refer-
    ent. It may be one or the other, or both at the same time. An activation
    accent expresses temporary cognitive states of discourse referents and may
    fall on a constituent expressing a presupposed proposition (even if it is not
    in Focus): e.g. the underlined constituents in I saw Mary and John yester-
    day. She says hello, but he’s still angry at you. vs. I saw Mary yesterday.
    She says hello (John was very busy that morning) [emphasis mine]).

  6. If only that the label ‘NewFoc’ does not seem to be very felicitous, since
    non-contrastive Focus need not fall on New information. Besides, both
    kinds of Focus, NewFoc and ContrFoc, entail a certain degree of newness or
    newsworthiness, albeit of different kinds. Hence both kinds could deserve
    the label ‘NewFoc’.

  7. We shall endorse Lambrecht’s (1988: 1) definition of ‘presupposition’ and
    ‘assertion’:
    [...] [presupposition entails] the proposition or set of propositions
    which the speaker assumes the hearer considers true (believes,
    knows) and is aware of at the time of utterance and which is rele-
    vant in the context of utterance. [...] [By contrast, assertion is what
    is] added to or superimposed on the pragmatic presupposition by
    an utterance [the proposition which the hearer is expected to know
    as a result of hearing a sentence].

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