|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
In this book, Nydia Flores-Ferran offers a comprehensive
examination of linguistic intensification in Spanish and English
communication. Flores-Ferran examines how intensification is
defined as well as the various linguistic features, strategies, and
devices we employ to escalate and amplify our oral and written
communication. The book builds on a rich body of literature,
exploring the conceptualization of linguistic intensification
within socio-pragmatics and Persuasion Theory. This book also
demonstrates the applicability of intensification in language
learning by discussing techniques native speakers use to amplify
the illocution of their communication.
This volume offers a comprehensive examination of mitigation in
speech in English and Spanish, exploring how it is defined and
theorized and the various linguistic features employed to soften or
downgrade the impact of a particular message across a range of
settings. Building on the body of work done on mitigation in
English, the book begins by discussing how it has been
conceptualized in the literature, drawing on politeness theory
among other perspectives from pragmatics, and highlighting
increasing research on these topics in native and bilingual Spanish
speakers and learners of Spanish. The volume explores examples from
a variety of discursive contexts, including institutions, courts,
and classrooms, to unpack mitigation as it occurs in spontaneous
speech through different lenses, looking both at the actual units
of discourse but also taking a broader view by examining
differences across dialects as well. The book also looks at the
ways in which conclusions drawn from this research might be applied
pedagogically in language learning classrooms. This volume will
serve as a jumping-off point for broader discussion in the field of
mitigation and will be of particular interest to graduate students
and researchers in pragmatics, sociolinguistics, and discourse
analysis, in addition to learners and pre-service teachers of
Spanish.
This volume offers a comprehensive examination of mitigation in
speech in English and Spanish, exploring how it is defined and
theorized and the various linguistic features employed to soften or
downgrade the impact of a particular message across a range of
settings. Building on the body of work done on mitigation in
English, the book begins by discussing how it has been
conceptualized in the literature, drawing on politeness theory
among other perspectives from pragmatics, and highlighting
increasing research on these topics in native and bilingual Spanish
speakers and learners of Spanish. The volume explores examples from
a variety of discursive contexts, including institutions, courts,
and classrooms, to unpack mitigation as it occurs in spontaneous
speech through different lenses, looking both at the actual units
of discourse but also taking a broader view by examining
differences across dialects as well. The book also looks at the
ways in which conclusions drawn from this research might be applied
pedagogically in language learning classrooms. This volume will
serve as a jumping-off point for broader discussion in the field of
mitigation and will be of particular interest to graduate students
and researchers in pragmatics, sociolinguistics, and discourse
analysis, in addition to learners and pre-service teachers of
Spanish.
|
You may like...
Holy Fvck
Demi Lovato
CD
R435
Discovery Miles 4 350
|