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Discourse and word order /

Integrating various aspects of human communication traditionally treated in a number of separate disciplines, Olga T. Yokoyama develops a universal model of the smallest unit of informational discourse, and uncovers the regularities that govern the intentional verbal transfer of knowledge from one i...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Yokoyama, Olga Tsuneko
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1986.
Colección:Pragmatics & beyond companion series ; 6.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • DISCOURSE AND WORD ORDER; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; FOREWORD; PART ONE. A MODEL OF KNOWLEDGE TRANSACTIONS; CHAPTER ONE. FOUR SETS OF KNOWLEDGE IN CONTACT; 0. The Minimal Unit of Discourse; 1. Communicable Knowledge; 1.1 Seven kinds of knowledge; 1.2 The relationship between different kinds of knowledge; 2. Sharing Knowledge; 3. Two Individuals in Discourse; NOTES TO CHAPTER 1; CHAPTER TWO. THE PROCEDURES FOR KNOWLEDGE TRANSACTIONS; 0. Constraining Subjectivity; 1. Assessment and Acknowledgment; 1.1 Assessment; 1.2. Acknowledgment; 2. Misassessment
  • 2.1. Assessment errors and adjustment2.2. Imposition and acceptance; 2.3. Assessment and context; NOTES TO CHAPTER 2; CHAPTER THREE. DISCOURSE-INITIAL UTTERANCES; 0. Sentences, Illocutionary Acts, and Utterances; 1. Directives; 2. Statements; 2.1 Propositional statements; 2.2 Specificational statemenss; 2.4 Predicational statemenss; 2.5 Referential statemenss; 2.6 Metinformaiionls statements; 2.7 Summary of statements; 3. Effusions; 3.1 Impositional effusions; 3.2 Non-impositional effusions; 3.3 Summary of effusions; 4. Questions; 4.1 Specificational quesiions; 4.2 Propositional questioss
  • 4.3 Referential quesiions4.4 Existential quesiions; 4.5 Predicational quesiions; 4.6 Metinformational questions; 4.7 Summary of questions; NOTES TO CHAPTER 3; CHAPTER FOUR. NON-DISCOURSE-INITIAL UTTERANCES; 0. Responses; 1. Obligatory Responses; 1.1 Answert to questions; 1.2 Acknowledgment; 1.3 Adjustment; 2. Voluntary Contributions; NOTES TO CHAPTER 4; CHAPTER FIVE. GRAMMAR AND PRAGMATICS; 1. The Model: a Summary; 2. Between grammar and pragmatics; 2.1 Deaccentuation of nouns; 2.2 Compatibility of indefinite subjects and stative predicates; 3. Communicational Competence; NOTES TO CHAPTER 5
  • PART TWO. RUSSIAN WORD ORDERCHAPTER SIX. HISTORY AND PRELIMINARIES; 1. Word Order Permutations in Linguistic Theory; 2. Russian Intonation and Word Order; 2.1 The problem; 2.2. An outline of Russian intonation; 2.2.1 Utterance intonation Type I
  • 2.2.2 Utterance intonation Type II
  • 2.2.3 Intonation types and word order; NOTES TO CHAPTER 6; CHAPTER SEVEN. DISCOURSE-INITIAL UTTERANCES
  • I: ASSESSMENT; 1. Directives; 1.1 First person direciives; 1.2 Second person direciives; 1.3 Third person direciives; 2. Statements; 2.1 Propositional statements
  • 2.2 Referential statements and statements about the CODE2.3 Existential and predicational statements; 3. Questions; 3.1 Specificational quesiions; 3.2 Propositional questioss; 3.3 Rererential and CODE questions; 3.4 Existential and predicaiional questioss; 4. Effusions; 5. Summary; NOTES TO CHAPTER 7; CHAPTER EIGHT DISCOURSE-INITIAL UTTERANCES
  • II: IMPOSITION AND GRAMMATICAL RELATIONS; 1. Imposition; 1.1 Personal Empathy: Imposition of referential knowledge; 1.2 Imposition of propositional knowledge; 2. Grammatical Relations; 2.1 Tee terms: their semantic roles, case, and animacy