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In our everyday speech we represent events and situations, but we
also provide commentary on these representations, situating
ourselves and others relative to what we have to say and situating
what we say in larger contexts. The present volume examines this
activity of discourse marking from an enunciative perspective,
providing the first English-language study of the highly
influential Theory of Enunciative and Predicative Operations. This
semantic/pragmatic theory is popular among academics who specialize
in linguistics, discourse analysis, translation studies and
didactics in France, but has not yet been widely adopted elsewhere.
The tools of this theory are applied to a variety of specific
discourse markers in contemporary English and semantic hypotheses
are tested using the data-based approach of corpus linguistics.
This book therefore provides an English-speaking readership with
the keys to understand the theory underlying the author's analysis
of a selection of markers ('anyway', 'indeed', 'in fact', 'yet',
'still', 'like' and 'I think'). This book will provide a valuable
resource for students and researchers in linguistics with an
interest in discourse markers, natural language argumentation,
formal semantics, the interfaces between syntax, semantics and
pragmatics, linguistic theorisation and French - or
"poststructural" - models of discourse analysis.
In our everyday speech we represent events and situations, but we
also provide commentary on these representations, situating
ourselves and others relative to what we have to say and situating
what we say in larger contexts. The present volume examines this
activity of discourse marking from an enunciative perspective,
providing the first English-language study of the highly
influential Theory of Enunciative and Predicative Operations. This
semantic/pragmatic theory is popular among academics who specialize
in linguistics, discourse analysis, translation studies and
didactics in France, but has not yet been widely adopted elsewhere.
The tools of this theory are applied to a variety of specific
discourse markers in contemporary English and semantic hypotheses
are tested using the data-based approach of corpus linguistics.
This book therefore provides an English-speaking readership with
the keys to understand the theory underlying the author's analysis
of a selection of markers ('anyway', 'indeed', 'in fact', 'yet',
'still', 'like' and 'I think'). This book will provide a valuable
resource for students and researchers in linguistics with an
interest in discourse markers, natural language argumentation,
formal semantics, the interfaces between syntax, semantics and
pragmatics, linguistic theorisation and French - or
"poststructural" - models of discourse analysis.
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