Review published In: Studies in Language
Vol. 35:4 (2011) ► pp.945–950
Book review
. Fillers, Pauses and Placeholders. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2010. . [Typological Studies in Language, 93]. vii+224 pp. ISBN 978 90 272 0674 9
Reviewed by
Published online: 10 January 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.35.4.08stv
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.35.4.08stv
References (10)
Ameka, Felix. 1992. Interjections: The universal yet neglected part of speech. Journal of Pragmatics 181: 101–18.
Erard, Michael. 2007. Um… Slips, Stumbles, and Verbal Blunders, and What They Mean. New York: Pantheon Books.
Himmelmann, Nikolaus. 1996. Demonstratives in narrative discourse: taxonomy of universal uses. In Studies in Anaphora, Barbara A. Fox (ed.), 205–254. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
James, Deborah. 1972. Some aspects of the syntax and semantics of interjections. Papers from the Eighth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, ed. by Paul M. Peranteau, Judith N. Levi and Gloria C. Phares. 162–72. Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society.
Rose, Ralph Leon. 1998. The communicative value of filled pauses in spontaneous speech. M.A. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Sacks, Harvey, Emanuel A. Schegloff & Gail Jefferson. 1974. A simplest systematic for the organization of turn-taking for conversation. Language 50(4): 696–735.
Taavitssainen, Irma. 1995. Interjections in early modern English: From imitation of spoken to conventions of written. Jucker, Andreas H. (ed.), Historical Pragmatics: Pragmatics Developments in the History of English, 439–65. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
