In:Usage-based Approaches to Japanese Grammar: Towards the understanding of human language
Edited by Kaori Kabata and Tsuyoshi Ono
[Studies in Language Companion Series 156] 2014
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 10 June 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.156.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.156.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgement
List of contributors
Introduction: Situating usage-based (Japanese) linguistics
Part 1. Cognition and language use
Subordination and information status: A case of To and Koto complement clauses
in Japanese
On state of mind and grammatical forms
from functional perspectives: The case for Garu and Te-iru
Grammar of the internal expressive sentences in Japanese: Observations and explorations
Subjectivity, intersubjectivity and Japanese grammar: A functional approach
What typology reveals about modality
in Japanese: A cross-linguistic perspective*
Part 2. Frequency, interaction and language use
If rendaku isn’t a rule, what in the world is it?
The semantic basis of grammatical development: Its implications for modularity, innateness, and the theory of grammar
Interchangeability of so-called interchangeable particles: Corpus analysis of spatial markers, Ni and E
The re-examination of so-called ‘clefts’: A study of multiunit turns in Japanese
talk-in-interaction
Activity, participation, and joint turn construction: A conversation analytic exploration of ‘grammar-in-action’
Part 3. Language change and variation
Context in constructions: Variation in Japanese non-subject honorifics
The use and interpretation of “regional” and “standard” variants in Japanese conversation
Index
