In:Pragmatic Markers and Peripheries
Edited by Daniël Van Olmen and Jolanta Šinkūnienė
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 325] 2021
► pp. 303–326
Chapter 11Functional asymmetry and left-to-right movement
Speaking of peripheries
Published online: 13 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.325.11bai
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.325.11bai
Abstract
This corpus-based study of the discourse marker
speaking of X addresses the issues of
functional asymmetry and left-to-right movement. It shows that
speaking of X has different pragmatic
functions, which may express different degrees of
(inter)subjectivity in different peripheral positions. But these
functions are not strictly confined to certain peripheries and,
diachronically, there is no statistically significant evidence of
further (inter)subjectification or change in peripheral preferences.
This study thus confirms that the functional asymmetry hypothesis is
better understood as a strong tendency that holds better for certain
functional domains than for others and it serves as a counterexample
to the related left-to-right movement hypothesis therewith.
Keywords: discourse marker, periphery, functional asymmetry, (inter)subjectivity
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Corpus and dataset
- 3.Discourse marking functions of SPOX
- 3.1Topic introduction
- 3.2Speech act adverbial
- 3.3Emphasized commenting
- 4.Peripheral positions and functional asymmetry
- 5.Left to right movement
- 6.Summary
Note References
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