DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3
Hits 1 – 20 of 56

1
Wenzhou Dialect Disyllabic Lexical Tone Sandhi with First Syllable Entering Tones
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
2
Wenzhou Dialect Disyllabic Lexical Tone Sandhi with First Syllable Entering Tones
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
3
Auditory and F-pattern Variations in Australian OKAY: A Forensic Phonetic Investigation
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
4
Comparing the Acoustic Properties of Normal and Shouted Speech: A Study in Forensic Phonetics
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
5
Continuous Linguistic Tonetic Representation using Polynomial Residuals
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
6
Hong Kong Cantonese Citation Tone Acoustics: A Linguistics Tonetic Study
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
7
Linguistic-Tonetic Differences in Target-Tone Realisation: Standard vs Kagoshima Japanese
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
8
Hong Kong Cantonese Citation Tone Acoustics: A Linguistics Tonetic Study
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
9
Continuous Linguistic Tonetic Representation using Polynomial Residuals
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
10
Comparing the Acoustic Properties of Normal and Shouted Speech: A Study in Forensic Phonetics
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
11
Auditory and F-pattern Variations in Australian OKAY: A Forensic Phonetic Investigation
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
12
Linguistic-Tonetic Differences in Target-Tone Realisation: Standard vs Kagoshima Japanese
In: Proceedings of the 8th Australian International Speech Science and Technology Conference (2015)
BASE
Show details
13
Individual differences and usage-based grammar
In: International journal of corpus linguistics. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 18 (2013) 4, 443-478
OLC Linguistik
Show details
14
Positionally-sensitive grammar : reversed polarity questions in Japanese
Sugiura, Hideyuki. - : ResearchSpace@Auckland, 2013
Abstract: The present study explores how grammar is adapted to, or affected by, different sequential positions. It presents an analysis of a type of negative question called a Reversed Polarity Question (RPQ) (Koshik, 2002, 2005, 2010) in naturally occurring Japanese talk-in-interaction. The data examined in this study comprises 12 video-recorded everyday conversations. The RPQ examined in this study has been recognized as a relatively new grammatical item with a distinctive intonation contour and is generally considered a resource for a request for agreement. However, the ways in which the RPQ is utilized in actual interaction have not been investigated in the literature. This study, which employs conversation analysis, is thus the first attempt to systematically investigate the RPQs actually utilized by conversational participants. The present investigation is specifically focused on RPQs deployed in first and second positions within assessment sequences. The study reveals their commonalties and differences. RPQs deployed in these positions commonly convey the speaker’s evaluative statement about a particular object or person on the basis of participants’ symmetrical access to the object or person that is established in the preceding or subsequent talk. Such a statement appeals to the participants’ common sense, knowledge, or reasoning, which is invoked by the relationship between the statement and the preceding or subsequent talk. Also by the use of the interrogative formulation, the RPQ makes a response conditionally relevant. However, the RPQ deployed in second position conveys extra-meanings, which fundamentally emerge from the particularity of its second-ness. The statement expressed by the RPQ in second position is designed to be an alternative statement to a prior assessment. That is, by the conditional relevance of the question-answer adjacency pair invoked by the use of the interrogative formulation, the RPQ undermines the first-ness of a prior assessment and establishes itself as a new first pair part (Heritage & Raymond, 2005). Another important finding of the present study concerns the range of practices by which the RPQ speaker establishes participants’ symmetrical access to a matter at hand and thereby creates an environment for the production of the RPQ. Significantly, these practices differ, depending upon the positions in which the RPQ occurs. This difference affects the kinds of actions implemented by the RPQ.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2292/20463
BASE
Hide details
15
Epistemic markers in university advisory sessions: towards a local grammar of epistemicity
Brezina, Vaclav. - : ResearchSpace@Auckland, 2012
BASE
Show details
16
Corpus linguistics and theoretical linguistics
In: International journal of corpus linguistics. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 16 (2011) 1, 3-44
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
Show details
17
Contrastive Connectors in English and Chinese: A Corpus-Based Study
Wang, Jianxin. - : ResearchSpace@Auckland, 2011
BASE
Show details
18
Means to an end: Communication strategies in French immersion
BASE
Show details
19
Usage-based models of language
Barlow, Michael (Hrsg.); Kemmer, Suzanne. - Stanford, Calif. : Center for the Study of Language and Information, c 2000
IDS Mannheim
Show details
20
Usage-based models of language
Barlow, Michael (Hrsg.); Kemmer, Suzanne (Hrsg.). - Stanford CA : CSLI Publ., 2000
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung

Page: 1 2 3

Catalogues
9
3
5
0
0
0
1
Bibliographies
15
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
7
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
2
0
0
0
Open access documents
20
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern