In:Grammar of Spoken and Written English
Douglas Biber, Stig Johansson, Geoffrey N. Leech, Susan Conrad and Edward Finegan
[Not in series 232] 2021
► pp. 1031–1120
Chapter 14The grammar of conversation
Published online: 29 November 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.232.c14
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.232.c14
Article outline
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14.1Introduction
- 14.1.1An example of conversation
- 14.1.2A functional survey of conversation
- 14.1.2.1Conversation takes place in the spoken medium
- 14.1.2.2Conversation takes place in shared context
- 14.1.2.3Conversation avoids elaboration or specification of meaning
- 14.1.2.4Conversation is interactive
- 14.1.2.5Conversation is expressive of politeness, emotion, and attitude
- 14.1.2.6Conversation takes place in real time
- 14.1.2.7Conversation has a restricted and repetitive repertoire
- 14.1.2.8Conversation employs a vernacular range of expression
- 14.1.2.9Lack of functional explanation
- 14.2Performance phenomena: Dysfluency and error
- 14.2.1Hesitations: Silent and filled pauses
- 14.2.1.1Frequency of filled and unfilled pauses
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.2.1.1Frequency of filled and unfilled pauses
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14.2.2Repeats
- 14.2.2.1Multiple consecutive repeats
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.2.2.2Frequency of repeats
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.2.2.3Repeats of forms with verb contractions
- CORPUS FINDINGS
- discussion of findings
- 14.2.2.1Multiple consecutive repeats
- 14.2.3Retrace-and-repair sequences: Reformulations
- 14.2.4Utterances left grammatically incomplete
- 14.2.5Syntactic blends
- 14.2.5.1Syntactic blends v. semantic gap-filling clauses
- 14.2.1Hesitations: Silent and filled pauses
- 14.3The constructional principles of spoken grammar
- 14.3.1Principles of online production
- 14.3.1.1Parenthetical structures
- 14.3.1.2The ‘add-on’ strategy
- 14.3.1.3Clausal and non-clausal units (C-units)
- 14.3.1.4Distribution of clausal and non-clausal units
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.3.2Prefaces, bodies, and tags
- 14.3.2.1Prefaces and other utterance launchers
- 14.3.2.2The ambivalent grammatical status of utterance launchers
- 14.3.2.3Extending the body
- 14.3.2.4Tags
- 14.3.3More on non-clausal units: Inserts
- 14.3.3.1Interjections
- 14.3.3.2Greetings and farewells
- 14.3.3.3Discourse markers
- 14.3.3.4Attention signals
- 14.3.3.5Response elicitors
- 14.3.3.6Response forms
- 14.3.3.7Hesitators
- 14.3.3.8Various polite speech-act formulae
- 14.3.3.9Expletives
- 14.3.3.10Distribution of inserts
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.3.4Syntactic non-clausal units
- 14.3.4.1Elliptic replies
- 14.3.4.2Other types of syntactic non-clausal unit
- 14.3.4.3Elliptic phrasal non-clausal units in their context
- 14.3.5Ellipsis in clausal units
- 14.3.5.1Initial (situational) ellipsis
- 14.3.5.2Initial ellipsis
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.3.5.3Final (post-operator) ellipsis
- 14.3.5.4Medial (operator) ellipsis
- 14.3.5.5Distribution of initial, medial, and end ellipsis
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.3.1Principles of online production
- 14.4Selected topics in conversational grammar
- 14.4.1A closer look at vocatives
- 14.4.1.1The distribution of vocatives
- corpus findings
- DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS
- 14.4.1.1The distribution of vocatives
- 14.4.2Conducive yes-no interrogatives
- 14.4.2.1Negative yes-no interrogatives
- 14.4.2.2Negative v. positive yes-no interrogatives
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.4.2.3Assertive yes-no questions
- 14.4.2.4Assertive v. non-assertive yes-no questions
- corpus findings
- discussion of findings
- 14.4.3First person imperatives with let’s
- 14.4.3.1Common accompaniments of let’s
- 14.4.4Direct speech reporting (quoted speech)
- 14.4.4.1Using utterance-launchers to open quoted speech
- 14.4.4.2Repetition of reporting clauses
- 14.4.4.3Reporting clauses with go
- 14.4.4.4Opening quoted speech with be + like, all
- 14.4.4.5The past progressive with reporting verbs
- 14.4.5Vernacular or non-standard grammar
- 14.4.5.1Morphophonemic variants
- 14.4.5.2Morphological variants
- 14.4.5.3Morphosyntactic variants
- 14.4.5.4Syntactic variants
- 14.4.5.5Conclusion
- 14.4.1A closer look at vocatives
