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Form and Function of Parasyntactic Presentation Structures

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This study investigates prosody-syntax interactions from a functional perspective and based on authentic corpus data. Drawing on Halliday's well-known interpretation of the tone unit as an informat...
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  • 01 January 2001
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This study investigates prosody-syntax interactions from a functional perspective and based on authentic corpus data. Drawing on Halliday's well-known interpretation of the tone unit as an information unit, Halford's idea of a prosodically and syntactically defined talk unit and Esser's concept of abstract presentation structures, a modified talk unit model is developed. The talk unit is built up of one to many tone unit(s). The focus of both the quantitative and the functional analysis is on the interplay between prosodic status and syntactic status at tone unit boundaries by means of which talk units as parasyntactic units are established. The database is provided by a sample of about 50,000 words mainly taken from the London-Lund Corpus of Spoken English. The findings reveal that speakers have at their disposal and make use of prosody-syntax interactions in order to structure information effectively and to allow for or facilitate turn taking. This volume is not only of interest for corpus linguists, but for functionalists in general and intonationists in particular. In analysing the stylistic and pragmatic potential of talk units and applying corpus linguistic methodology, this study breaks new ground with regard to functional and empirical approaches to spoken English.
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Price: $149.00
Pages: 163
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Language and Computers
Publication Date: 01 January 2001
ISBN: 9789042012950
Format: Hardcover
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"The book is well-written, very well organized with helpful visual summaries, tables, and figures … the approach is interesting and convincing. It is the first application of the talk unit model to corpus data. The resulting statistical evidence is compelling." - in: Anglia Band 121 (2003), Heft 2
"The data description and quantitative analysis that Mukherjee offers in this study will be of interest to any linguist who works on ditransitive verbs in English. The discussion centering on the importance of a methodology based on authentic data is of even more general interest." - in: The Linguist List 16.2055