In:Prosody in Interaction
Edited by Dagmar Barth-Weingarten, Elisabeth Reber and Margret Selting
[Studies in Discourse and Grammar 23] 2010
► pp. 131–160
Retrieving, redoing and resuscitating turns in conversation
Published online: 22 December 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/sidag.23.13loc
https://doi.org/10.1075/sidag.23.13loc
Not infrequently in conversation, a speaker launches an activity which in some way or other is intercepted by another co-participant, or is otherwise unsuccessful, such that it receives no proper uptake. Activities of this kind may simply be lost. However, speakers who did not succeed may also ‘try again’. In this paper, we describe three ways of ‘trying again’. We will show that apart from occurring in different sequential positions, they also display different constellations of prosodic and other formal features. While two of the relaunchings are related to the preceding first attempt by a systematic form shift, either upgrading or downgrading them, the third type appears in a variety of forms and will be shown to be formally unrelated to the resuscitated first activity.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Mazeland, Harrie
Mazeland, Harrie
Mazeland, Harrie
2024. Ordering a series of turn-initial particles. In New Perspectives in Interactional Linguistic Research [Studies in Language and Social Interaction, 36], ► pp. 49 ff.
Davidson, Christina
2015. “Don’t tell him just help him”. In Producing and Managing Restricted Activities [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 255], ► pp. 181 ff.
Benjamin, Trevor
[no author supplied]
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