Search results for " language"

showing 10 items of 7270 documents

2020

Abstract In classroom settings, laughter and smiles are resources for action that are available to both teachers and students. Recent interactional studies have documented how students use these resources to deal with trouble of various kind, but less is known about the sequential and activity contexts of teachers’ laughter-relevant practices, as well as their pedagogical functions. We use multimodal conversation analysis (CA) to investigate the interactional unfolding and pedagogical orientations of teacher smiles during instructional IRE (initiation-response-evaluation) sequences in a corpus of 37 bilingual lessons collected in schools in Finland and Spain. In analysing the focal smiles, …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageFacial expression4. Educationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLaughterConversation analysisResource (project management)Action (philosophy)Artificial IntelligenceEmbodied cognitionSituatedMathematics education0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologymedia_commonJournal of Pragmatics
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Some reflections on semantic–pragmatic cycles

2020

Abstract This paper explores novel ways to consider semantic–pragmatic cycles using a dual strategy: an inwards strategy, whereby the distinctive traits of a pragmatic cycle are established, and an outwards strategy, whereby the categories that delimit semantic–pragmatic cycles are described. The result of this exploration is the distinction between “pragmatic cycle”, “replication”, “concomitance” and “paradigmatic increase” as four different yet related processes. In addition, this study integrates Construction Grammar into the description of each process and shows that the study of semantic–pragmatic cycles can benefit from a constructional approach, adopting Traugott and Trousdale’s (201…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageFunctional programmingStructuralism (philosophy of science)Process (engineering)05 social sciencesDiasystem0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologyConstruction grammarDUAL (cognitive architecture)Language and LinguisticsLinguisticsJournal of Historical Pragmatics
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What is an indirect speech act?

2019

Abstract The notion of an indirect speech act is at the very heart of cognitive pragmatics, yet, after nearly 50 years of orthodox (Searlean) speech act theory, it remains largely unclear how this notion can be explicated in a proper way. In recent years, two debates about indirect speech acts have stood out. First, a debate about the Searlean idea that indirect speech acts constitute a simultaneous realization of a secondary and a primary act. Second, a debate about the reasons for the use of indirect speech acts, in particular about whether this reason is to be seen in strategic advantages and/or observation of politeness demands. In these debates, the original pragmatic conception of sen…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageGeneral Computer SciencePoint (typography)PolitenessLiteral (mathematical logic)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesCognitive pragmaticsRealization (linguistics)06 humanities and the arts0603 philosophy ethics and religionLanguage and LinguisticsIndirect speechLinguisticsSpeech actBehavioral NeuroscienceHistory and Philosophy of Science060302 philosophy0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologySentencemedia_commonPragmatics and its Interfaces as related to the Expression of Intention
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Signs activate their written word translation in deaf adults: An ERP study on cross-modal co-activation in German Sign Language

2020

Since signs and words are perceived and produced in distinct sensory-motor systems, they do not share a phonological basis. Nevertheless, many deaf bilinguals master a spoken language with input merely based on visual cues like mouth representations of spoken words and orthographic representations of written words. Recent findings further suggest that processing of words involves cross-language cross-modal co-activation of signs in deaf and hearing bilinguals. Extending these findings in the present ERP-study, we recorded the electroencephalogram (EEG) of fifteen congenitally deaf bilinguals of German Sign Language (DGS) (native L1) and German (early L2) as they saw videos of semantically a…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageGerman Sign LanguageSign languagesign language; phonology; priming; EEG; bimodal bilingualismLanguage and LinguisticsSentence processingGerman030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciencessign languagesign language linguistics psycholinguistics0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesprimingLanguage. Linguistic theory. Comparative grammarP101-41005 social sciencesBimodal bilingualismPhonologylanguage.human_languageLinguisticsphonologybimodal bilingualismlanguageeeg0305 other medical sciencePsychologyPriming (psychology)Spoken languageGlossa: a journal of general linguistics
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Confronting blackface

2019

Abstract Recently, the Netherlands witnessed an agitated discussion over Black Pete, a blackface character associated with the Saint Nicholas festival. This paper analyzes a televised panel interview discussing a possible court ban of public Nicholas festivities, and demonstrates that participants not only disagree over the racist nature of the blackface character but also over the terms of the debate itself. Drawing on recent sociolinguistic work on stancetaking, it traces how panelists ‘laminate’ the interview’s participation framework by embedding their assessments of Black Pete in contrasting dialogical fields. Their stancetaking evokes opposing trajectories of earlier interactions and …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHegemonyField (Bourdieu)05 social sciencesDialogical selfMedia studiesIdentity (social science)Blackface050801 communication & media studiesCharacter (symbol)SAINTLanguage and LinguisticsPhilosophy0508 media and communicationsCriticism0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologyPragmatics. Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)
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Towards multilingual competence: examining beliefs and agency in first year university students’ language learner biographies

2021

As working life across the world is increasingly multilingual, multicultural and multidisciplinary, higher education language teaching is faced with a challenge of how to prepare students for it. Many universities have recently developed multilingual pedagogies but central to their success is learners’ perceptions of these practices. To fill this gap, this article explores first year university students’ language learner biographies to gain insight into how learners construct their linguistic realities. The biographies were studied with discourse analytical methods to examine the participants’ beliefs about language learning and their sense of agency in it. The results reveal that participa…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHigher educationmedia_common.quotation_subjectlanguage learningLanguage and LinguisticskorkeakouluopetusEducationdiscursiveLanguage learnerMultidisciplinary approachPedagogyAgency (sociology)käsityksetComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONmonikielisyys0501 psychology and cognitive scienceskielen oppiminenCompetence (human resources)media_commonkieltenopetusoppimiskokemuksetbusiness.industry05 social sciencestoimijuusLanguage acquisitiondiskurssianalyysihigher educationMulticulturalismagencybeliefsLanguage educationbusinessPsychologyThe Language Learning Journal
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Outlining a grammaticalization path for the Spanish formula en plan (de): A contribution to crosslinguistic pragmatics

2020

Abstract This article discusses the diachronic development of the Spanish multifunctional formula en plan (with its variant en plan de, literally ‘in plan (of)’ but usually equivalent to English like). The article has two main aims: firstly, to describe the changes that the formula has undergone since its earliest occurrences as a marker in the nineteenth century up to the early 21st century. The diachronic study evinces a process of grammaticalization in three steps: from noun to clause adverbial and then to discourse marker. Secondly, to conduct a contrastive analysis between en plan (de) and the English markers like and kind of/kinda so as to shed new light on the potential existence of …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHistory05 social sciencesPlan (drawing)PragmaticsGrammaticalizationLanguage and LinguisticsLinguistics030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciencesNounTheoretical linguistics0501 psychology and cognitive sciences0305 other medical scienceDiscourse markerAdverbialContrastive analysisLinguistics
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Verbalization of nominalizations: A typological commentary on the article by Nikki van de Pol

2019

Abstract The present article provides a typological commentary on the article by Nikki van de Pol (2019) on the history of the English gerund. It is shown that in spite of certain idiosyncratic aspects, the history of the verbal gerund illustrates a well-known grammaticalization path of verbalization, whereby deverbal nouns are first grammaticalized into nonfinite forms (participles, infinitives, converbs), and may later be integrated into the verbal paradigm. It is further suggested that the mixed behavior attested for the verbal gerund, which deviates both from the nominal and from the clausal prototype, may be universally supported by constructional polysemy and blending with constructio…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHistoryGerund05 social sciencesGrammaticalization050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsNominalizationLinguisticsNounSpite0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPolysemyCline (hydrology)Language Sciences
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From engl-isc to whatever-ish: a corpus-based investigation of -ish derivation in the history of English

2020

Drawing on a wide array of historical and contemporary corpora, this article provides one of the first empirical analyses of the intricately related functional changes that -ish underwent in the course of English language history. By investigating the distribution of -ish formations, the analysis sheds light on the productivity of the suffix, which does not only become evident in the numerous hapax legomena, but also in the trajectory of change itself in which -ish occurs with ever new base categories and new functions. Moreover, the article revisits theoretical claims made in the literature about the diachronic development and synchronic properties of -ish and reassesses them in the light …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHistoryHapax legomenon05 social sciencesEnglish languageLanguage and LinguisticsLinguistics030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciencesHistory of EnglishCorpus based0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSuffix0305 other medical scienceProductivity (linguistics)English Language and Linguistics
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Figure–Ground Spatial Relationships in Finnish Sign Language Discourse

2020

AbstractThis study is about expressing spatial relationships between Figure and Ground in Finnish Sign Language discourse and shows that the variation in this expression is primarily discourse dependent. The main findings are, first, that Ground mainly precedes Figure whether the Figure is new or a known referent within the discourse; the reverse order is possible only when the Figure is known. Second, the lexical signolla(‘have’) appears more frequently in expressing spatial relationships with a new Figure and less frequently with a known Figure but never in a construction with Figure preceding Ground; the formoli(‘had’), referring to the past, appears only in Figure preceding Ground const…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHistorygroundP1-1091Sign languagespatial relationshipsLanguage and Linguistics030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciencesviittomakielisequentiality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPhilology. Linguisticskeskustelunanalyysi05 social sciencesFigure–groundsimultaneityLinguisticsfigureFinnish sign languagefinnish sign languagesanajärjestyssuomalainen viittomakielidiscourse0305 other medical sciencelauseoppiOpen Linguistics
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