附註:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introducing interactional linguistics / Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen and Margret Selting -- pt. 1. Language structure in interaction. Emerging syntax for interaction : noun phrases and clauses as a syntactic resource for interaction / Marja-Liisa Helasvuo -- At the intersection of turn and sequence : negation and what comes next / Cecilia E. Ford -- The implementation of possible cognitive shifts in Japanese conversation : complementizers as pivotal devices / Hiroko Tanaka -- On causal clause combining : the case of 'weil' in spoken German / Hannes Scheutz -- Dutch 'but' as a sequential conjunction : its use as a resumption marker / Harrie Mazeland and Mike Huiskes -- On some uses of the discourse particle 'kyl(lä)' in Finnish conversation / Auli Hakulinen -- Interactional linguistics and language development : a conversation analytic perspective on emergent syntax / Juliette Corrin, Clare Tarplee and Bill Wells.
pt. 2. Interactional order and linguistic practice. Fragments of units as deviant cases of unit production in conversational talk / Margret Selting -- Notes on turn-construction methods in Danish and Turkish conversation / Jakob Steensig -- An exploration of prosody and turn projection in English conversation / Barbara A. Fox -- Postposition-initiated utterances in Japanese conversation : an interactional account of a grammatical practice / Makoto Hayashi -- Confirming intersubjectivity through retroactive elaboration : organization of phrasal units in other-initiated repair sequences in Korean conversation / Kyu-hyun Kim -- Some arguments for the relevance of syntax to same-sentence self-repair in everyday German conversation / Susanne Uhmann -- Simple answers to polar questions : the case of Finnish / Marja-Leena Sorjonen.
摘要:Current interactional linguistic research appears to be crystallizing around systematic themes, which are all represented in this collection of papers. In the first section, where the relation between language and interaction is viewed from the perspective of language structure, several articles deal with the potential of a single structure for both turn and sequence construction, revealing a play-off between planned and occasioned syntax with potentially far-reaching consequences for language development. Other articles deal with lexical expressions as resources for the conduct of interaction.