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Type Noun Constructions in Slavic, Germanic and Romance Languages
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 742

Type Noun Constructions in Slavic, Germanic and Romance Languages

This volume is the first dedicated to the comprehensive, in-depth analysis of constructions with nouns like ‘type’ and ‘sort’. It focuses on type noun constructions in Romance, Germanic and Slavic languages, integrating the different descriptive traditions that had been developed for each language family. As a result, a greater variety of type noun constructions is revealed than in the hitherto more fragmented literature. But attention is also drawn to the cross-linguistic similarity of the new pragmatic meanings, such as ad hoc and approximative categorization, hedging, focus and filler uses, and the new grammatical functions in NPs (e.g. phoric uses), clauses (e.g. adverbial uses) ...

Socio-Pragmatic Variation in Ireland
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 190

Socio-Pragmatic Variation in Ireland

Pragmatics represents the study of language use in socially grounded contexts and it is thus a central discipline in Linguistics. Due to its focus on language use, it has been referred to as a transdiscipline that interacts with a broad variety of disciplines that are concerned with social action and, as such, pragmatics overlaps with many other linguistic and non-linguistic disciplines. Irish English is one of the earliest varieties of English to have attracted the interest of scholars working on pragmatic variation. From a sociolinguistic and a pragmatics perspective, it represents one of the best studied varieties of English and can thus be argued to offer important impulses to the study of variationist pragmatics in general. Ulster Scots, though in close contact with Irish English, has received less attention. Given this important position of Irish English in pragmatics research and the paucity of such research on (Ulster) Scots, this volume explicitly focuses on socio-pragmatics and deals with the way speakers in and around Ireland use language in a way so that it assists them in the construction of their social identities or helps them navigate socio-cultural spaces.

Language Change in the 20th Century
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 300

Language Change in the 20th Century

Language Change in the 20th Century: Exploring micro-diachronic evolutions in Romance languages examines the distinctive features that set the study of the 20th century apart from preceding periods. With a primary focus on Romance languages, including Spanish, Italian, French, and Portuguese, the book advocates for the adoption of innovative methodologies to enhance the nuanced retrieval of research data: the use of speaker’s attitudes questionnaires, apparent time constructions, and S-curves. Additionally, new materials are addressed as diachronic data sources: mass-media recordings from radio and TV, colloquial conversations, and sociolinguistic corpora. Results focus on the evolution of discourse markers, address terms, as well as on the influence of specific processes such as colloquialization or external mechanisms on the language changes developed during this period. In sum, the 20th century is presented in this book as a new strand in diachronic studies, rather than another time span.

A Crosslinguistic Perspective on Clear and Approximate Categorization
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 406

A Crosslinguistic Perspective on Clear and Approximate Categorization

In recent decades, research on clear and approximate categorizations and their manifestations in language has been generating a number of studies on syntax, semantics, pragmatics, psycholinguistics, philosophy, and logic. This is particularly interesting because these two operations have formally similar realizations even in languages belonging to different groups. The existence of a large number of type nouns testifies to their productivity. If these nouns serve to both categorize and approximate, the fundamental question is that of identifying the processes of interpretation concerned, since there is not always a consensus on interpretation. This book makes it clear that there are differen...

Pragmaticalization
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 408

Pragmaticalization

The present volume is dedicated to the phenomenon of pragmaticalization in the context of the theory of grammaticalization. While, in recent decades, the growing interest in the analysis of pragmatic phenomena within grammaticalization research was triggered, amongst others, by studies in the field of subjectivity and intersubjectivity in language, we still lack a model for a broad understanding of how changes on the discourse level come about and face a lack of information which provides a conclusive theoretical framework to systematically record the emergence of an entire layer of discourse units in language. The book is one of the first comprehensive collections contributed to the topic o...

Building Categories in Interaction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 467

Building Categories in Interaction

This book addresses the topic of linguistic categorization from a novel perspective. While most of the early research has focused on how linguistic systems reflect some pre-existing ways of categorizing experience, the contributions included in this volume seek to understand how linguistic resources of various nature (prosodic cues, affixes, constructions, discourse markers, ...) can be ‘put to work’ in order to actively build categories in discourse and in interaction, to achieve social goals. This question is addressed in different ways by researchers from different subfields of linguistics, including psycholinguistics, conversation analysis, linguistic typology and discourse pragmatics, and a major point of innovation is represented in fact by the interdisciplinary nature of the volume and in the systematic search for converging evidence.

Discourse Phenomena in Typological Perspective
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 447

Discourse Phenomena in Typological Perspective

This book aims at investigating discourse phenomena (i.e., linguistic elements and constructions that help to manage the organization, flow, and outcome of communication) from a typological and cross-linguistic perspective. Although it is a well-established idea in functional-typological approaches that grammar is shaped by discourse use, systematic typological cross-linguistic investigations on discourse phenomena are relatively rare. This volume aims at bridging this gap, by integrating different linguistic subfields, such as discourse analysis, pragmatics, and typology. The contributions, both theoretically and empirically oriented, focus on a broad variety of discourse phenomena (ranging from discourse markers to discourse function of grammatical markers, to strategies that manage the discourse and information flow) while adopting a typological perspective and considering typologically distant languages.

Evidential Marking in European Languages
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 749

Evidential Marking in European Languages

How are evidential functions distinguished by means other than grammatical paradigms, i.e. by function words and other lexical units? And how inventories of such means can be compared across languages (against an account also of grammatical means used to mark information source)? This book presents an attempt at supplying a comparative survey of such inventories by giving detailed “evidential profiles” for a large part of European languages: Continental Germanic, English, French, Basque, Russian, Polish, Lithuanian, Modern Greek, and Ibero-Romance languages, such as Catalán, Galician, Portuguese and Spanish. Each language is treated in a separate chapter, and their profiles are based on a largely unified set of concepts based on function and/or etymological provenance. The profiles are preceded by a chapter which clarifies the theoretical premises and methodological background for the format followed in the profiles. The concluding chapter presents a synthesis of findings from these profiles, including areal biases and the formulation of methodological problems that call for further research.

Beiträge zum 18. Arbeitstreffen der Europäischen Slavistischen Linguistik (Polyslav)
  • Language: ru
  • Pages: 296

Beiträge zum 18. Arbeitstreffen der Europäischen Slavistischen Linguistik (Polyslav)

Der Band umfasst 34 Beiträge, die am 18. Arbeitstreffen der Vereinigung Europäische Slavistische Linguistik (POLYSLAV) in Budapest präsentiert wurden. Inhaltliche Schwerpunkte bilden einerseits sprachgeschichtliche Themen mit Fokus auf dem 18. Jahrhundert (Russisch, Kirchenslavisch, prosta mova) und andererseits Fragen zu Lexikologie und Lexikografie aus diachroner (Slovenisch, Ukrainisch, Weißrussisch) und synchroner Perspektive (Polnisch, Russinisch, Russisch, Ukrainisch, Weißrussisch). Ein komparativer Ansatz wird in Arbeiten zum baltisch-slavischen Sprachkontakt, zum Spracherwerb des Slovenischen, zu polnischen und slovakischen Verbalpräfixen sowie zur Phraseologie im Slovakischen und Serbischen verfolgt. Drei Beiträge beschäftigen sich mit der linguistisch-theoretischen bzw. slavistischen Wissenschaftsgeschichte; zwei behandeln sprachliche (schlesische Dialekte) bzw. ethnisch-nationale (Ex-Jugoslawien) Stereotypen. Je eine Arbeit ist dem Ausdruck von Habitualität im Russischen, der Phonotaktik des Tschechischen, den Toponymen der Cernobyl'-Zone sowie Vokativen in ukrainischen folkloristischen Beschwörungen gewidmet.

Elastic Language
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 259

Elastic Language

Language is like a slingshot, stretching for various communicative targets. This book reveals the art of purposive and powerful language stretching.