In:The ‘Noun Phrase’ across Languages: An emergent unit in interaction
Edited by Tsuyoshi Ono and Sandra A. Thompson
[Typological Studies in Language 128] 2020
► pp. 237–270
Chapter 10The pragmatics of ‘light nouns’ in Besemah
Published online: 15 July 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.128.10mcd
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.128.10mcd
Abstract
Perhaps the most widely discussed aspect of the NP in western Austronesian languages is the relative clause, which is described in terms of its syntactic relation to the noun it modifies. It is expressed by a ‘relativizer’ and a so-called ‘gap’ in the modifying clause that is co-referential with the head noun. One western Austronesian language that appears to be quite different in this regard is Besemah, a little-described Malayic language of southwest Sumatra. This is because constructions analogous to relative clauses in Besemah are best described as Noun Modifying Constructions (NMC) following studies of similar phenomena in other languages, most notably Japanese. Like Japanese, Besemah NMCs most often occur with a so-called ‘light’ head noun, which has a general, abstract meaning, such as ‘thing’, ‘situation’, etc. This paper shows that NMCs headed by a closed class of light nouns serve a number interactional functions, including formulating reference to discourse entities that are recognizable to participants, elaborating upon discourse entities in increments, jointly working out the identity of a referent in other-initiations of repair, and constructing story beginnings with unattached light nouns among others. I argue that the semantically-bleached nature of light nouns and the ‘loose’ (pragmatically-determined) relationship between the light head noun and modifying elements allow speakers to construct NMCs that fit local contexts and serve various interactional purposes.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Light nouns and noun-modifying constructions in Besemah
- 3.Data
- 4.Noun-modifying constructions in Besemah interaction
- 4.1Referring expressions
- 4.2Unattached light nouns in NMCs
- 4.3Light nouns in equational constructions
- 4.4Light nouns in lexicalizations and fixed expressions
- 5.Conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes References Appendix
References (41)
Clift, Rebecca. 2007. Grammar in time: The non-restrictive ‘which’-clause as an interactional resource. Tech. rep. 55: 51–82.
Cole, Peter & Gabriella Hermon. 2005. Subject and non-subject relativization in Indonesian. Journal of East Asian Linguistics 14(1): 59–88.
Couper-Kuhlen, Elizabeth & Tsuyoshi Ono (eds). 2007. Turn Continuation in Cross-linguistic Perspective. Special issue of Pragmatics 17(4).
Couper-Kuhlen, Elizabeth & Margret Selting. 2018. Interactional Linguistics: Studying Language in Social Interaction. Cambridge: CUP.
Dingemanse, Mark, Giovanni Rossi & Simeon Floyd. 2017. Place reference in story beginnings: A cross-linguistic study of narrative and interactional affordances. Language in Society 46(2): 129–158.
Du Bois, John W., Stephan Schuetze-Coburn, Susanna Cumming & Danae Paolino. 1993. Outline of discourse transcription. In Talking Data: Transcription and Coding in Discourse Research, Jane Anne Edwards & Martin D. Lampert (eds), 45–89. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Englebretson, Robert. 2008. From subordinate clause to noun-phrase: Yang constructions in colloquial Indonesian. In Crosslinguistic Studies of Clause Combining. The Multifunctionality of Conjunctions [Typological Studies in Language 80], Ritva Laury (ed.), 1–33. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Ewing, Michael C. 1991. The discourse function of relative clauses in Indonesian. Berkeley Linguistic Society 17: 81–91.
2005. Colloquial Indonesian. In The Austronesian Languages of Asia and Madagascar, K. Alexander Adelaar & Nikolaus P. Himmelmann (eds), 227–258. New York NY: Routledge.
Ewing, Michael C. & Susanna Cumming. 1998. Relative clauses in Indonesian discourse: Face to face and cyberspace interaction. In Papers from the Fifth Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, Shobhana L. Chelliah & Willem J. de Reuse (eds), 79–96. Tempe AZ: Program for Southeast Asian Studies, Arizona State Unviersity.
Ford, Cecilia E., Barbara, Fox A. & Sandra A. Thompson. 2002. Constituency and the grammar of turn increments. In The Language of Turn and Sequence, Cecilia E. Ford, Barbara A. Fox & Sandra A. Thompson (eds), 14–38. Oxford: OUP.
Fox, Barbara A. 1987. Discourse Structure and Anaphora: Written and Conversational English. Cambridge: CUP.
Fox, Barbara A. & Sandra A. Thompson. 1990a. A discourse explanation of the grammar of relative clauses in English conversation. Language 66(2): 297–316.
. 1990b. On formulating reference: An interactional approach to relative clauses in English conversation. IPrA Papers in Pragmatics 4(1–2): 183–196.
. 2007. Relative clauses in English conversation: Relativizers, frequency, and the notion of construction. Studies in Language 31(2): 293–326.
Goodwin, Charles. 1984. Notes on story structure and the organization of participation. In Structures of Social Action, J. Maxwell Atkinson & John Heritage (eds), 225–246. Cambridge: CUP.
Helasvuo, Marja-Liisa. 2001. Emerging syntax for interaction: Noun phrases and clauses as a syntactic resource for interaction. In Studies in Interactional Linguistics [Studies in Discourse and Grammar 10], Margret Selting & Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen (eds), 25–50. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Heritage, John. 1984. A change-of-state token and aspects of its sequential placement. In Structures of social action: Studies in Conversation Analysis, J. Maxwell Atkinson & John Heritage (eds), 299–345. Cambridge: CUP.
Kornfilt, Jaklin & Nadezhda Vinokurova. 2017. Turkish and Turkic complex noun phrase constructions. In Matsumoto, Comrie & Sells (eds), 251–292.
Lambrecht, Knud. 2001. A framework for the analysis of cleft constructions. Linguistics 39(3): 463–516.
Laury, Ritva & Marja-Liisa Helasvuo. 2015. Detached NPs with relative clauses in Finnish conversations. In Information Structuring of Spoken Language from a Cross-linguistic Perspective [Trends in Linguistics Studies and Monographs 283], M. M. Jocelyne Fernandez-Vest & Robert D. Van Valin Jr. (eds), 149–166. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Mandelbaum, Jenny. 2013. Storytelling in conversation. In The Handbook of Conversation Analysis, Jack Sidnell & Tanya Stivers (eds), 492–507. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Maruyama, Akiyo. 2003. Japanese Wa in conversational discourse: A contrast marker. Studies in Language 27(2): 245–285.
Matsumoto, Yoshiko. 1997. Noun-modifying Constructions in Japanese: A Frame-semantic Approach. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Matsumoto, Yoshiko, Bernard Comrie, & Peter Sells (eds). 2017a. Noun-Modifying Clause Constructions in Languages of Eurasia: Rethinking Theoretical and Geographical Boundaries [Typological Studies in Language 116]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Matsumoto, Yoshiko, Bernard Comrie & Peter Sells. 2017b. Noun-modifying clause constructions in languages of Eurasia: Rethinking theoretical and geographical boundaries. In Matsumoto, Comrie & Sells (eds), 3–21.
McDonnell, Bradley. 2016. Symmetrical Voice Constructions in Besemah: A Usage-based Approach. PhD dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara.
. in prep. Generalized Noun Modifying Clause Constructions in Besemah. ms.
Ono, Tsuyoshi & Sandra A. Thompson. 1994. Unattached NPs in English Conversation. Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 20(1): 402–419.
. 2009. Fixedness in Japanese adjectives in conversation: Toward a new understanding of a lexical (‘part-of-speech’) category. In Formulaic Language, Vol. 1: Distribution and Historical Change [Typological Studies in Language 82], Roberta Corrigan, Edith A. Moravcsik, Hamid Ouali & Kathleen Wheatley (eds), 117–146. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Ryave, Alan L. 1978. On the achievement of a series of stories. In Studies in the Organization of Conversational Interaction, Jim Schenkein (ed.), 113–132. New York NY: Academic Press.
Sacks, Harvey. 1986. Some considerations of a story told in ordinary conversations. Poetics 15(1–2): 127–138.
Shibatani, Masayoshi. 2008. Relativization in Sasak and Sumbawa, Eastern Indonesia. Language and Linguistics 9(4): 865–916.
Takara, Nobutaka. 2012. The weight of head nouns in noun-modifying constructions in conversational Japanese. Studies in Language 36(1): 33–72.
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
McDonnell, Bradley
2023. Universal quantifiers, focus, and grammatical relations in Besemah. Studies in Language 47:2 ► pp. 422 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 7 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
