158 LANGUAGE AND THE INTERNET
- ∗∗∗LUCKMAN has left channel #PUNJAB
- ∗∗∗LUCKMAN has joined channel #punjab
dave-g good stuff:)
kally: so hows school life, life in geneal, love life,
family life?
jatt no we don’t know each other, i fine
ashna: where r ya from?
Messages from one exchange routinely interrupt another. If we
disentangle them, we can see that there are basically two exchanges:
Ashna and Jatt are carrying on one conversation:
1.<ashna>hi jatt
4.<Jatt>ashna: hello?
6.<ashna>howareujatt
9.<Jatt>ashna: do we know eachother?. I’m ok how are you
14.<ashna>jatt no we don’t know each other, i fine
15.<Jatt>ashna: where r ya from?
Dave-G and Kally are carrying on another:
3.<Dave-G>kally i was only joking around
5.<kally>dave-g it was funny
8.<Dave-G>kally you da woman!
12.<kally>dave-g good stuff:)
Jatt then starts another conversation with kally:
13.<Jatt>kally: so hows school life, life in geneal, love life, family
life?
In addition, Puja and Luckman leave the session (the asterisks show
messages produced by the IRC software):
2.∗∗∗Signoff: puja
7.<LUCKMAN>ssa all
10.∗∗∗LUCKMAN has left channel #PUNJAB
11.∗∗∗LUCKMAN has joined channel #punjab
Each exchange is interrupted by messages from the other, destroy-
ing any conventional understanding of adjacency pairing (p. 33).