Article published In: Pragmatics & Cognition
Vol. 27:2 (2020) ► pp.432–456
An overview of the Japanese copula da as an utterance-final expression in conversation
Published online: 6 October 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.19037.nis
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.19037.nis
Abstract
The present study examines cases of the Japanese copula da used in the utterance-final position
in naturally occurring conversations. The morpheme da in Japanese is typically categorized as a type of copula in
linguistic studies, but da also functions as an utterance-final expression, especially in the spoken form of
Japanese. The examined recordings of naturally occurring conversations for the present study contained 120 cases of
utterance-final da, and 89 (74.2%) of them were uttered immediately following statements of subjective
evaluation. In addition, of these 89 cases of utterance-final da that followed statements of evaluation, 87 were
determined to follow statements in which the speaker expressed his or her negative attitude toward the evaluated matter. The data
analysis also showed that 26 cases (21.7%) of utterance-final da in the examined recordings were uttered
immediately after the speaker discovered a new piece of information. Based on the findings from the data analysis, the present
study argues that utterance-final da is considered to be one of the expressions in Japanese that can signal both
discovery of new information and the speaker’s negative attitude toward a stated matter. In addition, the present study also
argues that da marks the speaker’s emotional exclamatory reaction when it is used in the utterance-final
position.
Keywords: Japanese, copula, da, discourse, evaluation
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Japanese da as copula
- 3.Remaining issues
- 4.Research design
- 5.Data analysis
- 5.1Cases of utterance-final da directly following statements of evaluation
- 5.1.1Utterance-final da that follows iya
- 5.1.2Statements of evaluation with other expressions
- 5.2Utterance-final da in statements of discovery
- 5.3Emotional reactions behind the use of utterance-final da
- 5.4Uncategorized cases
- 5.1Cases of utterance-final da directly following statements of evaluation
- 6.Conclusion
- Notes
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