In:Pragmatic Markers and Peripheries
Edited by Daniël Van Olmen and Jolanta Šinkūnienė
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 325] 2021
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 13 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.325.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.325.toc
Table of contents
IntroductionPragmatic markers and peripheries: An overview1
Daniël Van Olmen
Jolanta Šinkūnienė
Part I.Defining the periphery
Chapter 1.Discourse markers at the peripheries of syntax, intonation and
turns: Towards a cognitive-functional unit of segmentation19
Liesbeth Degand
Ludivine Crible
Chapter 2.Dutch pragmatic markers in the left periphery49
Ton van der Wouden
Ad Foolen
Part II.Left and right periphery on their own
Chapter 3.Presentation followed by negotiation: Final pragmatic particle sequencing in Ainu77
Katsunobu Izutsu
Mitsuko Narita Izutsu
Chapter 4.Another ‘look!’: The Latvian particle lūk in parliamentary
discourse111
Nicole Nau
Part III.Left versus right periphery
Chapter 5.Verb-based discourse markers in Italian: Guarda, vedi, guarda te, vedi te143
Linda Badan
Chapter 6.Interactions between distribution and functional uses in Italian
adversative pragmatic markers: A corpus-based and multilevel approach171
Doriana Cimmino
TChapter 7.The Lithuanian focus particles net ‘even’ and
tik ‘only’ and clause peripheries199
Erika Jasionytė-Mikučionienė
Chapter 8.Žinai ‘you know’ in Lithuanian discourse: Distributional features and functional profile229
Jolanta Šinkūnienė
Chapter 9.Second person parentheticals of unintentional visual perception in
British English251
Daniël Van Olmen
Chapter 10.Emoji as graphic discourse markers: Functional and positional associations in German WhatsApp®
messages277
Heike Wiese
Annika Labrenz
Part IV.Peripheries across time
Chapter 11.Functional asymmetry and left-to-right movement: Speaking of peripheries303
Yinchun Bai
Chapter 12.The diachronic origin of English I mean and German
ich meine327
Daniela Kolbe-Hanna
Natalia Filatkina
Chapter 13.Pragmatic markers at the periphery and discourse prominence: The case of English of course3
Diana M. Lewis
Part V.Peripheries across languages
Chapter 14.The Norwegian tag da in comparison to English
then385
Kaja Borthen
Elena Karagjosova
Chapter 15.A cross-linguistic look at the right periphery: Utterance-final pragmatic markers in English, Spanish and
Lithuanian415
Anna Ruskan
Marta Carretero
Index449
