In:Grammar in Action: Building comprehensive grammars of talk-in-interaction
Edited by Jakob Steensig, Maria Jørgensen, Jan Lindström, Nicholas Mikkelsen, Karita Suomalainen and Søren Sandager Sørensen
[Studies in Language and Social Interaction 37] 2025
► pp. 26–46
Chapter 2On granularity in grammar and action
Published online: 3 June 2025
https://doi.org/10.1075/slsi.37.02fox
https://doi.org/10.1075/slsi.37.02fox
Abstract
In this study, we explore the relevance of granularity to the study of grammar-in-interaction, with special
reference to the writing of an online grammar (cf. Steensig, et al. 2023).
In CA/IL research, it routinely occurs that a form or action is described and analyzed at one level of detail, and
then subsequent research reveals that that form/action actually displays meaningful and ordered variation that
deserves more focused examination. Here we summarize previous studies which reveal the significance of more granular
descriptions, and we discuss our maxim — arising from Sacks’ claim that there is ‘order at all points’ — that the more
granular our analytic approaches are, the more granular our understandings of forms and actions will become.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Granularity in the study of a particle: The case of oh
- 3.Granularity in the study of clause beginnings: The case of ((do) you) want…
- 4.Granularity in the study of clause endings: The case of The Problem with ‘X’
- 5.Discussion: What is ‘grammar’, and what is ‘action’?
- 5.1What is ‘grammar’?
- 5.2What is ‘action’?
- 5.3How to incorporate granularity into written grammars
- 6.Conclusion
Notes References
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