In:In Search of Basic Units of Spoken Language: A corpus-driven approach
Edited by Shlomo Izre'el, Heliana Mello, Alessandro Panunzi and Tommaso Raso
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 94] 2020
► pp. 383–402
Chapter 7Some notes on the Hearts and Navy excerpts according
to the Language into Act Theory
Published online: 18 June 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.94.16cre
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.94.16cre
Abstract
The paper sketches the Language into Act Theory and how it catches
the difference between the Navy monologue and the Hearts
dialogue. According to L-AcT, two types of reference units, both ending with a prosodic
terminal break are identified: utterance matching with a single speech act
and stanza expressing a flow of thought through an adjunction process.
Navy is a sequence of two narrative stanzas with a
complex informational organization, while Hearts is organized in 11
utterances showing high illocutionary variation. The core of the
information pattern is the Comment accomplishing the illocutionary force. The information
structure, expressing a closed set of functions, is in one-to-one correspondence with the
prosodic structure. The linguistic content is not compositional across information units.
Article outline
- 1.Premises
- 2.The tagged transcription according to L-AcT
- 3.The pragmatic analysis
- 4.The organization of information
- 5.L-AcT analysis beyond pragmatics
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