Cover image for ‘Well’ in Dialogue Games : A discourse analysis of the interjection 'well' in idealized conversation.
‘Well’ in Dialogue Games : A discourse analysis of the interjection 'well' in idealized conversation.
Title:
‘Well’ in Dialogue Games : A discourse analysis of the interjection 'well' in idealized conversation.
Author:
Carlson, Lauri.
ISBN:
9789027280015
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (113 pages)
Series:
Pragmatics & Beyond
Contents:
WELL IN DIALOGUE GAMES A Discourse Analysis of the Interjection well in Idealized Conversation -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of contents -- Acknowledgements -- 1.INTRODUCTION -- 1.1. Aims -- 1.2. Idealizations -- 1.3. Chapter outlines -- 2. THEORY -- 2.1. Dialogue games -- 2.2. Conversational analysis -- 2.3. Computational models of dialogue -- 2.3.1. Goal-directedness -- 2.3.2. Modeling beliefs -- 2.3.3. Current focus of dialogue -- 2.3.4. Rules of dialogue shared by participants -- 3. EARLIER TREATMENTS OF WELL -- 3.1. Lakoff (1973a) -- 3.2. Murray (1979) -- 3.3. Svartvik (1980) -- 3.4. Owen (1981) -- 4. THE PRESENT TREATMENT -- 4.1. The hypothesis -- 4.2. Development of the hypothesis -- 4.3. Data and classification -- 4.3.1. Criteria pertaining to dialogue structure -- 4.3.2. Utility related criteria -- 4.3.3. How many meanings? -- 5. WELL AS A QUALIFIER -- 5.1. Question-answer exchanges -- 5.1.1. Dialogue internal qualifications -- 5.1.1.1. Defective questions -- 5.1.1.2. Defective answers -- 5.1.1.3. Demanded explanations -- 5.1.2. Dialogue external qualifications -- 5.1.2.1. Conversational maxims compromised -- 5.1.2.2. Other interests compromised -- 5.2. Other exchanges -- 5.2.1. Replies -- 5.2.2. Arguments -- 5.2.3. Corrections -- 5.2.4. Comments -- 5.2.5. Exclamations -- 5.2.6. Topic suggestions -- 6. WELL AS A FRAME -- 6.1. Opening a dialogue -- 6.2. Transition situations -- 6.2.1. Preparatory moves -- 6.2.2. Topic shift -- 6.2.3. Turn taking -- 6.3. Closing -- 6.4. Turn internal cases -- 7. CONTRASTIVE STUDIES -- 7.1. Well vs. oh -- 7.1.1. (Ό.oh) -- 7.1.2. Exclamation -- 7.1.3. Replies -- 7.1.4. Unexpected topic -- 7.1.5. Disappointment -- 7.1.6. Topic shift -- 7.2. Well and Finnish no -- 7.3. Schourup (1983) -- 7.3.1. Theory and methodology -- 7.3.2. Hypothesis -- 7.3.3. Exclamations.

7.3.4. Topic shifting -- 7.3.5. Answers -- 7.3.6. Before questions -- 7.3.7. Corrections -- 8. EXTENSIONS -- 8.1. Politeness -- 8.2. Emotions -- 8.3. Well in writing -- FOOTNOTES -- SOURCES OF EXAMPLES -- REFERENCES.
Abstract:
This dialogue game approach to the discourse analysis of the English interjection well aims at the formulation of rules which would be informative (marking some contexts of use as more natural than others), systematic (applicable in a mechanical or at least in a non-ad hoc way), and adequate (showing putative competitors to be either false to fact, too narrow or too wide, or demonstrably equivalent).
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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