The Prosody of Formulaic Sequences.
"To apply the same approaches to analysing spoken and written formulaic language is problematic; to do so masks the fact that the contextual meaning of spoken formulaic language is encoded, to a large extent, in its prosody. In The Prosody of Formulaic Sequences, Phoebe Lin offers a new perspec...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London :
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC,
2018.
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Colección: | Corpus and Discourse Ser.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; List of Illustrations; Acknowledgements; Chapter 1 Introduction; 1.1 Is there a prosody of formulaic language?; 1.2 The three empirical studies; 1.3 The structure of the book; Chapter 2 Formulaic Language: An Overview; 2.1 What is formulaic language?; 2.2 The criteria for formulaic language; 2.3 The two main methods of identifying formulaic language; 2.4 Chapter summary; Chapter 3 Can We Identify Formulaic Language Based on Prosodic Cues?; 3.1 Introduction.
- 3.2 The phonological method as a window into the psycholinguistic processing of formulaic language3.3 The evolution of the phonological method; 3.4 The relationship between prosodic cues and holistic processing; 3.5 Prosodic cues associated with formulaic language; 3.6 Chapter summary; Chapter 4 Study One: Do Formulaic Sequences Align with Intonation Units?; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Corpus data; 4.3 Method; 4.4 Results; 4.5 Part A summary; 4.6 Corpus data; 4.7 Data collection; 4.8 Data analysis; 4.9 Results; 4.10 Part B summary; 4.11 Summary and conclusion of study one.
- Chapter 5 Study Two: A Comprehensive Profile of the Intonation, Stress and Rhythm of Formulaic Language5.1 Introduction; 5.2 The prosodic structure of Text W; 5.3 Results; 5.4 Conclusion and implications of study two; Chapter 6 Study Three: A Multimodal Approach to the Identification of Formulaic Language by Native Speaker Judgement; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 The role of the original audio recordings in native speaker judgement; 6.3 Inter-judge reliability in formulaic language research involving native speaker judgement; 6.4 Methodology; 6.5 Data analysis; 6.6 Results and discussion.
- 6.7 Chapter summaryConclusions: The Prosody of Formulaic Language; 7.1 Looking back: The findings, the limitations and the overarching research question; 7.2 Looking ahead: Implications, applications and directions for future research; 7.3 Conclusion; Appendix 1: Information on the Pilot Study; Appendix 2: The Instructions Used in Various Sessions of the Pilot Study; Version 1b; Version 2a; Version 2b; Version 3; Version 4; Appendix 3: Screenshots of the Interactive PowerPoint Interface with Integrated Audio Playback; Appendix 4: The Task Booklet for the Native Speaker Judgement Process.