Discourse Markers and (Dis)fluency: Forms and Functions Across Languages and Registers

Ludivine Crible*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

Spoken language is characterized by the occurrence of linguistic devices such as discourse markers (e.g. so, well, you know, I mean) and other so-called “disfluent” phenomena, which reflect the temporal nature of the cognitive mechanisms underlying speech production and comprehension. The purpose of this book is to distinguish between strategic vs. symptomatic uses of these markers on the basis of their combination, function and distribution across several registers in English and French. Through deep quantitative and qualitative analyses of manually annotated features in the new DisFrEn corpus, this usage-based study provides (i) an exhaustive portrait of discourse markers in English and French and (ii) a scale of (dis)fluency against which different configurations of discourse markers can be diagnosed as rather fluent or disfluent. By bringing together discourse markers and (dis)fluency under one coherent framework, this book is a unique contribution to corpus-based pragmatics, discourse analysis and crosslinguistic fluency research.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationAmsterdam
PublisherJohn Benjamins Publishing Company
Number of pages268
ISBN (Electronic)9789027264305
ISBN (Print)9789027200464
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2018

Publication series

NamePragmatics and Beyond New Series
Volume286
ISSN (Print)0922-842X

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • pragmatics
  • theoretical linguistics
  • dictionaries

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