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Discourse and Syntax March 5, 2009 Thompson and Couper-Kuhlen. Clause as Locus of Interaction
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grammar shapes interaction
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Introduction observation of interaction (discourse) will help us understand more about grammatical structures. grammar shapes interaction
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Introduction
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Interaction shapes grammar actions greeting people ending a conversation
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Interaction shapes grammar
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An analysis of interaction contributes to our understanding of grammar. A linguistic perspective on the nature of grammar must be both interactionally sensible and cognitively realistic. Formats or schemas are a valuable notion in the study of language in interaction. (patterns)
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Schemas in interaction
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utterances (in certain contexts) habits (schemas, patterns) part of grammar (function)
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Interaction shapes grammar
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In a conversation, we need to solve communicational problems. The utterances made in a conversation become a routine. They are repeated in subsequent instances. They become grammaticalized and become part of the grammar. Different languages find varying grammatical solutions. How does grammar shape interaction?
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Interaction and the ‘ clause ’ What task is the other person trying to accomplish? We know through the utterances spoken. We know what the other person is trying to say. We know when the other person completes his utterance. Grammar plays the major role in this understanding.
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Interaction and the ‘ clause ’ When a turn is finished, the stretch of talk is a grammatical format. In English, this grammatical format is the clause.
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Interaction and the clause In other languages, the clause is also thought of as the locus of interaction.
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The ‘ clause ’
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Upon hearing the predicate (which is within the clause), the recipient will know what action is being taken up. This is also true for Japanese. The authors are trying to say that this is true for any language. The predicate when it will occur (early or late) the nature of that predicate
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The ‘ clause ’ More than half of utterances are not clauses, but utterances are made with reference to a nearby verb or predicate.
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The ‘ clause ’ Is this also true in Mandarin Chinese, Taiwanese, or Hakka? Can you provide illustrations?
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The ‘ clause ’ in English Clause formats: Subject NP (pronoun) + verb (complex) + object NP + prep phrase + adverb + adv phrase
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The ‘ clause ’ in English
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Lines 12-15 When an English speaker hears an NP near the beginning of a turn unit, s/he can predict that a verb complex is likely to follow. Upon hearing that verb complex, s/he can narrow down the range of types of linguistic elements that it would take to complete the clause in context and thus to bring the turn unit to a point of possible completion.
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Lines 12-15
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The clause in English
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The ‘ clause ’ in Japanese Japanese clause: predicate + phrases But the Japanese clause has a different structure from English.
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The ‘ clause ’ in Japanese Japanese: delayed projectability predicate comes last anaphors; how many NPs is not predictable
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The ‘ clause ’ in Japanese to compensate, utterance-final elements (following the predicate): speaker’s stance and mark turn as complete
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The ‘ clause ’ in Japanese saying verb
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English and Japanese
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