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On the characteristic of personal reference terms in Korean: A comparison with Japanese based on TV dramas
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In: Conference Proceedings for the 9th Korean Studies Association of Australia (KSAA) Biennial Conference 2015 (2022)
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The function of the zero particle with special reference to spoken Japanese
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In: Journal of Pragmatics (2015)
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The role of the overt expression of first and second person subject in Japanese
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In: Journal of Pragmatics (2015)
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Japanese education in the multicultural-multilingual society of Australia (Osutoraria ni okeru tabunka tagengosyakai to nihongo kyoiku)
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In: Journal of the International Student Centre (Yokohama Kokuritsu Daigaku Ryūgakusei Sentā kiyō) (2015)
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The function of the zero particle with special reference to spoken Japanese
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In: Journal of Pragmatics (2015)
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Japanese education in the multicultural-multilingual society of Australia (Osutoraria ni okeru tabunka tagengosyakai to nihongo kyoiku)
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In: Journal of the International Student Centre (Yokohama Kokuritsu Daigaku Ryūgakusei Sentā kiyō) (2015)
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Involvement and the Japanese interactive particles ne and yo
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In: Journal of Pragmatics (2015)
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Involvement and the Japanese interactive particles ne and yo
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In: Journal of Pragmatics (2015)
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11 |
The role of the overt expression of first and second person subject in Japanese
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In: Journal of Pragmatics (2015)
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Abstract:
While much attention has previously been paid to the well-known phenomenon of subject omission in Japanese, the flip side of the same phenomenon - namely, cases where the subjects are overtly expressed, in particular even in typical environments for the omission - has been neglected in the literature of Japanese linguistics. Focusing on first and second person subjects, the current study details the role of their overt use in conversations, and shows that in addition to the function in discourse contexts, such as 'contrastiveness' and 'emphasis', the overt expression of first and second person subjects is a useful tool to index the speaker's social relationship with the other participant, such as social difference or intimacy. This is particularly important for a group of pro-drop languages like Japanese and Korean, in which the expression of difference is the norm and a variety of personal references play a significant role in expressing such difference, as well as intimacy.
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Keyword:
Japanese; Keywords: First and second person subjects; Overt expression; Spoken language; Subject omission
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1885/18853
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Characteristics of the written narratives of intermediate Japanese language students
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Korean phonology : a principle-based approach
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MPI-SHH Linguistik
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