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Journal mutations
Part of
(Non)referentiality in Conversation
Edited by Michael C. Ewing and Ritva Laury
[
Pragmatics & Beyond New Series
344] 2024
► pp.
205
–
209
◄
previous
Subject index
A
A
action-centered approach
198
ad hoc expressions
141–2 ;
see also
NPs (noun phrases), novel
adjacency pairs
41
adult-child dialogues
8, 80–3, 97–9
adult discourse in
81, 89–92, 99
corpus of
84–9
use of noun phrases in
89–97
affiliative stance
183, 192
allusion, in Indonesian
15–16, 21, 27, 31
allusive reference
12, 14–21, 23–4, 30–2, 124, 127n4
ambiguity, referential
29–30
anaphora
4–5
in ordinary language philosophy
124
zero
see
zero pronominalization
anaphoric reference
94, 126, 129
antecedents, and indeterminate reference
126–7, 133
apodosis
76
argumentation, and second person generic expressions
179, 186–95
Arkisyn corpus
39, 57, 66
articles, definite/indefinite
83
assessments
35, 41, 51, 142, 156
association preference
196
audience diversity
5
B
bonding, social
141–2, 163
boundedness
72
buildups
195
C
CallFriend corpus
169
candidate understanding
68, 181
cataphoric reference
125
CEJC (Corpus of Everyday Japanese Conversation)
143–4
child language
80–4
child-directed speech
92
children, use of noun phrases
84–9, 92–4, 97–8 ;
see also
adult-child dialogues
clustering
42, 167, 170, 172–4, 174, 178, 194–5, 198
co-construction
83, 97, 99
common ground
15–16, 31, 123
communicative experience
81
complementizer
50
complex informing
179–83, 192–4
conditional clauses
74–5
confirmation questions
154–5
consciousness, of speaker and listener
4
context: clear from
16, 19, 21
and referentiality
2–3
contextualization cues, multimodal
8
controversial subject matter
7, 195
Conversation Analysis
5, 40, 58, 167–8, 176, 195
conversation flow
111, 177
conversational contexts
5, 58, 167, 198
Cooperative Principle
105–6
corpus: of adult-child dialogues
84–9
Arkisyn
39, 57, 66
CallFriend
169
CEJC
143–4
of Finnish
39, 57, 66
cultural knowledge
128, 136
curiosity principle
196
D
de-embodiment
156, 162–3
definite determiners
83, 90–1, 127
definiteness
1, 3
deictic field
48
deictic shifts
40, 45
deixis: and context
2
Mayan
5
in ordinary language philosophy
124
Deixis am Phantasma
47, 71
demonstrative pronouns
21, 90, 95, 126–8
denoting phrases
1–2
determiners: children’s use of
82–3, 85, 90–1, 97
and
raha
61
dialogical sequences, identifying
84–9
dialogue: in development of child language
89–92
everyday
see
everyday conversation
reported
45, 51
values of NPs
94–7
see also
adult-child dialogues
disagreement sequences
183, 188–9, 192
discourse, reference in
3–4
discourse context
21, 31, 143
discourse referentiality
4, 13–14, 16–17, 22–3, 26
discourse roles
35, 38, 51
discourse-functional research tradition
58
discursive space
81, 97
disfluencies
135
divisible nouns
56, 58–9, 67, 72
dramatic function
168, 170
dramatization
26–7
E
ellipsis
12, 14–15, 103–4, 119
embodied conduct
36, 45–8, 47, 51
embodiment
141, 149, 156, 162–3
Emergent Grammar
58
English: pronoun ellipsis in
104
referential specificity in
124, 126, 136
second person pronoun
38, 168, 195
use of generic expressions
193
e-NPs
64–5
epistemic stance
197
epistemic status
70, 148, 179, 183, 186
Ethnomethodology
195–6
everyday conversation
1, 76
ad hoc expressions in
142
children’s
80–1, 89–92
indeterminacy and fluidity of reference in
123–36
in Indonesian
see
Indonesian colloquial conversation
in Japanese
103, 108–20
in Mandarin Chinese
see
Mandarin Chinese conversation
everyday interactions: corpus analysis of
83
first and second person forms in
38
organization of
58
everyday talk-in-interaction
4, 169, 176
existential utterances
94–6
explicit reference
12, 24–30
and children’s use of NPs
95
and silent reference
106, 113, 119
F
fairly clear continuity
22
filler syllables
85–6, 90
Finnish
6, 24
corpora of
39, 57, 66
‘money’ in
see
raha
person forms in
35–7, 39–41, 40
referentiality in
61
first and second person forms: in Finnish corpus
39–40
linguistic features and embodied conduct
45–8
and open reference
35–8
and participation framework
38–9, 48–51
sequential contexts
41–4
see also
second person pronouns
fixed expressions
63, 107
fluid generality
28–30
fluidity of reference
6, 8, 12–13, 31–2
in everyday conversation
124, 128–36, 168
and explicit referents
27–30
and indeterminate reference
21–3
footing: change in
7, 24–30, 38–9, 45, 48, 51
referentiality and
12, 24, 32
frame semantics
103, 105–8, 110, 113, 115, 119–20
French: determiners in
85
indefinite pronouns
168, 175
frequent occurrences
31, 81
G
generality
4, 12–14
limited
51–2, 167, 175, 195–8
locally conditioned
172, 174–6, 178, 194–5
shift in
21, 31
generalizations
5, 7, 26–7
generalized reference
168
generic expressions
36
association across speakers
194
in less dominant conversations
178
and primary speaker roles
177
second person
167–70, 178–96
truncated
181
word for ‘person’ or ‘man’ becoming
75
generic statements: in Finnish
37, 63
forceful nature of
195
in Indonesian
23, 30
in Mandarin Chinese
175, 183–4
as rhetorical device
197
genericity
52, 60–1, 192n6
givenness
4, 13
glossing conventions
202
grammar: multimodal approach to
142
shaped by use
57–8
grammatical puns
161
H
hand gestures, Japanese use of
148–9, 153–4, 159–63
hearers, roles of
38–9
high transitivity contexts
72
honorifics
116–17, 119
hypothetical reference
24
hypothetical situations
43–6
I
iconicity
4
identifiability
3–4, 13, 58, 67
identity, continuity of
3, 6, 13, 56, 67–8
imperfective verbs
59, 66
impersonal pronouns
35–6, 75–6, 168, 170, 172, 175
incongruent stances
see
stance, congruence
indefinite determiners
83, 85, 97
indefinite pronouns
168, 170, 175
indefiniteness, quantitative
58–9
indeterminacy of reference
12–13, 31–2, 107, 123
in child language
80–1, 83, 94, 96
in everyday conversation
125–8, 132–5
and explicit reference
24
and fluidity
23
and inferability
108, 110–11
particular
17–19
of pronominal forms
124
in sequence
19–21
as unproblematic
6–8
indexical expressions
5, 196–7
indeterminate
127–8
Indonesian
7
Indonesian colloquial conversation
7, 11–13
allusive reference
14–23, 124
explicit reference
24–30
referentiality in
31–2
inferables
103, 105, 119–20
ambiguous
116–17
ensuring specific
117–19
indeterminate
108–13
latent resolution of
113–16
inferentiality
107–19
information flow
4, 6
and Indonesian conversation
12–13, 16, 31
instantiation of unmentioned elements
103, 106, 110, 113, 115
intention, speaker’s
3–4
interaction: and language acquisition
83
and referentiality
4–8
interactional demands
167, 198
interactional functions
36, 40–1, 170
interactional linguistics
40, 58
and interactionism
81
and novel expressions
142
interactionism
81
interactive processes
162, 194, 197
intersubjectivity
8, 52
and generic pronouns
169, 195
and referential resources
136
intonation
8
intonation units
14, 143, 171, 173
irrealis contexts
61, 63, 65, 71–2, 75–6
J
Japanese
8, 103
allusive reference in
15–16, 103–10, 120, 124
creation of novel expressions
142–62
K
kinesic movements, narrative
45
knowledge, shared
16, 85, 93
L
labelling
15, 80–1, 84, 88, 92, 94–8
language acquisition
80, 82–3
language development
86, 98
language habits
2
laughter: in Finnish conversation
70–1, 74
in Japanese word creation
8, 154, 157, 161–3
limited statements
174, 195
linguistic knowledge, general
106
lists, turning into unified NP
150–6
logicians
1–2
low transitivity contexts
66
M
Mandarin Chinese
7
second person expressions in
42, 51, 168–9
Mandarin Chinese conversation
169–97
general broad patterns in
172–8
limited generality
195–7
preference for clusters
194–5
manipulation: of referentiality
141–2, 163–4
of speaker perspectives
195
Maxim of Quantity
106–7
Maya
5
meaning, construction of
82
metalinguistic function
168, 170
metonymic inference
134
minimization, preference for
6
modal constructions
82
money, category of
56, 61
morals and truisms
168, 174–5, 195
multimodal approach to grammar
142, 169
multi-party conversation
168
Murriny Patha
124
N
negated clauses
61, 65
NINJAL (National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics)
143
nominal expressions
12–14, 81
nonreferential NPs
12, 142, 162
nonreferentiality
1
in child language
80–2, 84
and predications
57
in use of
raha
63–6, 69, 71, 74
nonsense NPs
157, 163–4
nonspecific reference
84, 168
normativity
168
noun phrases
see
NPs
nouns, potential and actual
2
novel expressions
see
NPs (noun phrases), novel
NPs (noun phrases): in adult-child dialogues
80, 83–4, 89–99
and anaphora
4
definite
1–3, 85, 89–91, 96, 128, 136
explicit
31, 109n6, 114n7
generic
88
indefinite
81–2, 96
indeterminate
94–5, 98, 125–7
isolated
85–7, 97–8
lexical
12
novel
141–3, 148, 154, 156, 161–4
and referentiality
30–1
null-arguments
105
O
onomatopoeia: creating novel expressions from
7, 141, 143–9
phrasal reanalysis of
156–7
open reference of personal forms
35–7, 39–43, 40, 46–8, 51–2
Ordinary Language Philosophy
123–4
origo
35, 45, 47, 50–1
overlap, in Japanese word creation
8, 143, 148, 157, 162
P
participation framework
35–6, 38–40
modulating
48–51
partitive case, in Finnish
58–9, 61–7, 69, 71
person reference
5
personal experience, accounts of
35, 41–3, 50–1
personal pronouns
167
in Finnish
35
in Indonesian
15, 22, 28–30
see also
first and second person forms
open reference of personal forms
second person pronouns
persuasion, and second person generic expressions
179, 183–6, 188–9, 192–5
phaticness
141–2, 156, 162–3
playfulness
7, 142, 162–3
potential referents
104–5, 107
potential values
91, 94, 99
pragmatic particles
16, 148
pragmatic skills, early
81, 97
preceding context
89, 92–4
predicate nominals
20, 66
novel NPs as
142, 148–9, 154–6, 164
predications: about money
56–7, 61–5, 69, 72, 76
of generic statements
175
primary speakership
167
and complex informing
180–1
in Mandarin Chinese conversation
172, 176–8, 177, 194
and second person generic expressions
197–8
pro-drop
104
production format
38
progressivity
7
uninterrupted
31, 128, 131, 135
pronouns: in child language
82–3
ellipsis of
104
in Finnish
59, 64–5, 76
fluidity of reference
129, 131–2, 134
in interactional sequence
4–5
omitted
15
referential use of
3, 12, 19, 167–8
social indexicality in
28–30
without explicit antecedents
6
see also
demonstrative pronouns
first and second person forms
impersonal pronouns
indefinite pronouns
personal pronouns
prosodic cues
192, 193
prosody, enacted
45–6, 51
Q
qualia theory
106n2
R
raha
56–7, 76–7
declension of
60
in Finnish grammar
58–60
in non-referential use
61–5
referential uses of
65–8
shifting use in conversation
68–76
real-time reference
124, 196
reanalysis, creating novel NPs through
156–62
reconciliation
184–6, 192, 193
reference, temporal nature of
126
referent co-construction
8, 52
referential domain
168
referential expressions: acquisition of
82
characteristics of
12
in Conversation Analysis
5
discourse functions of
105
referential fluidity
see
fluidity of reference
referential indeterminacy
see
indeterminacy of reference
referential indices
35–6, 38
referential nouns
149, 163
referentiality: and child language
80, 82–4, 87–9, 92–4, 97
elusiveness of
13
and inferables
105
and inferentiality
107–19
interactivity of
162–3
key themes in
6–8
and nonreferentiality
1, 6, 81–2, 89, 99
particular and generic
24–8
playfulness of
163
prior research on
1–6
shifts in
6–7, 11–12, 21, 23–4, 32
and singular-plural distinction
57, 60, 68, 76–7
theoretical background
12–14
see also
open reference
referring expressions
1–4, 52, 82, 98
referring practices
12–14, 16, 19, 23, 124
Relevance Theory
196
repetition, intense
162
reported speech: attribution of
26
change in footing to
7, 39
direct
43
generic pronouns in
169, 172
markers of
45, 50–1
resistance stance
192
response particles
43
return pop
5
S
scope of reference
37, 167–8, 175–6, 195, 198
second person pronouns, generic use of
38, 167–70, 172–6, 174, 180, 188, 195–8 ;
see also
generic expressions
semantic theory
103, 105
sequential contexts
36, 40–2
sequential features
41, 168
shifters
38
shifting reference
123–4, 129–30, 132, 134–6
silent reference
104, 120
singular-plural distinction
56–7, 68, 72, 76
situational insertion
168, 175
social action
1
and indeterminacy
12
and referentiality
31–2
social goals
6–8
social indexicality
28–9
sociocultural information
116
solidarity
169, 195
spatio-temporal frames
8, 45, 51–2
specificity
1, 13, 52
as interactionally motivated
60–1
shifts in
8
speech genres
98
stance: affiliative
183, 192
congruence
7, 167, 181, 183–4, 186, 191, 197–8
stative predicates
57
subject referents
20–1, 117
suffixes: creating novel expressions
142, 164
for verbal person
37, 39, 41, 59–60, 68
switch reference, non-explicit
111–13
syntactic arguments, unexpressed
19, 104
T
Tagalog articles
12
thematic sequences
6, 86–7, 97–8
third person referential categories
196
topic continuity
4
topic NPs, in Japanese
143, 146, 149–50, 155–6, 162–3
transcription conventions
122, 201–2
TRUST-ENSURE principle
103, 105–6
turn-taking
168
U
uncertainty, in child language
80
understanding: demonstrating
181
network of
106
shared
72, 127
unexpressed referents
16, 19, 136
universal statements
174, 178, 194
V
vantage point
48
verb tense
16n2
verbal person markers
35
voice modulation
45, 51
voice quality
50
voices-effect, layering of
51
W
word creation
141–2
Z
zero pronominalization
104, 107
zero-mentioned referents
71
zero-person constructions
37, 42–4, 63, 72, 74