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Summary Language and communication

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Summary of An Introduction to Language and Linguistics by Ralph W. Fasold and Jeff Connor-Linton, CH 5, CH 6, CH 10, CH 13, and other book about gestures p.118-134.

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  • C5, c6, c10, c13, other book about gestures
  • December 20, 2017
  • 39
  • 2017/2018
  • Summary

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Language and Communication part 2.

Discourse analysis = focuses on language use above and beyond the sentence.

Discourse = beliefs, values, and practices associated with the use of language / language use above
the sentence (text) and beyond the sentence (context)

- Larger units of speech (larger than a sentence)
- Language as it is actually used by its speakers
- Draws on speaker’s communicative competence (=tacit cultural knowledge about how to use
a language in different speech situation, how to interact with different people engaged
together in different speech events, and how to use language to perform different acts)
- Involves:
- Different linguistics disciplines
- Cognitive processes (organisation of thoughts into utterance)
- Interactional roles (who is speaking? Who is listening?)
- Social relationships
- Cultural models (what is done/not done in a particular culture)
- Displays coherence (this is why it differs from a random sequence of sentences)

John: Oh hi, I didn’t expect to see you here, today. Are you better? – Sam: Yes, I think I am ok again.
 Probably some kind of regular meeting
 John and Sam know each other
 John is surprised
 Sam was not feeling good before bad enough so that John did not expect him

Interlocutors = people talking to one another

1. Spoken discourse
- Involves different kind of processes that work together to produce coherence
- Fast process
- Achieve several goals at the same time  using and connecting range of different units
- Verbalising thoughts
- New information
- Repair errors produced in an utterance
- Change roles between speaker and listener
- Think about (the needs) of interactants
- Perform speech acts
- Different units of speech (e.g. speech acts, idea units, turns at talk, sentences)
- People jointly ease new information into a discourse and collaboratively develop topics of talk




Transcribing: - To capture complete picture of particular interaction between different speaker
 audio/video recordings
- For an analysis recordings have to be transcribed

, - Apart from words, several other features are noted down:
- features of speech (intonation, volume, non-fluency, pauses)
- aspects of interaction (overlaps between turns of talk)
- aspects of non-vocal interaction (gaze, gesture)
- Transcription is often the first step in the analytical process because you have to
listen to a stretch of discourse again and again

. sentence-final falling intonation
, clause-final intonation (“more to come”)
! exclamatory intonation
? final rise, as in a yes/no question
… pause of ½ second or more
‘ primary stress
CAPS emphatic stress
[ overlapping speech
] no perceptible inter-turn pause
: elongated vowel sound
- glottal stop: sound abruptly cut off
“” dialogue, quoted words
() “pharenthetical” intonation: lower amplitude and pitch plus flattened intonation contour
hhh laughter (h= one second)
= at right of line indicates segment to be continued after another’s turn; at left of line indicates continuation of
prior segment after another’s turn
/?/ inaudible utterance
{} transcriber comment on what is said



2. Written discourse
- Learning to write is different from learning to speak
- Instruction in graphic conventions (printing letters/connecting them together in
script)
- Technology (how to use a keyboard and manage files)
- Punctuation
- Rules of correct grammar
- Explicit process involving instructions and conventions
- Ideas on how we ‘have’ to write have an influence on the way we write
- Difference with respect to standards between the different genres of writing
- Use different aspects of language to maintain reader’s interest and make text relevant to
reader’s needs and goals  same as speakers: design discourse for projected recipients
- Written texts have a longer lifespan


Difference between spoken and written discourse
- Speaking is faster than writing
- Speaker can continuously adjust what they say
- Speed leads to fragmentation  spoken discourse more fragmented
- Role of recipient (in spoken recipient is co-participant)

, - Slower writing process leads to integration  written more integrated
E.g. a. Gina: have you ever smelled a magnolia blossom? Sue: mmm. Gina: Absolutely gorgeous.
b. On one particular morning this summer, there was a certain fragrance that I recognized to
be a glorious magnolia.

Script =

Fragmentation = segmentation of information into small, syntactically simple units of language. Units
present one idea at a time. Units are easy to produce and parse.
Integration = arrangement of information into long, syntactically complex units of language that
present more than one idea at a time. Production and parsing requires more time.

 Difference can be seen by looking at the introduction of new referents into discourse

Grammatical intricacy
Spoken discourse Written discourse
- Less complex - More complex
- A more spread out set of clauses - Lots of elaborations
Lexical density
Spoken discourse Written discourse
- Fewer content words - More content words (verbs, nouns) than function
- Content words tend to spread out over number words
of clauses - Many content words in individual clauses
Nominalisation
Spoken discourse Written discourse
- Few nominalisations - Frequent nominalisations
- Relatively short noun groups - Longer noun groups
- High information density
Explicitness
Spoken discourse Written discourse
- Can be as explicit as written language - Generally more explicit than spoken discourse
- Other means to be explicit (gesture, mimics)
Contextualisation
Spoken discourse Written discourse
- Depends on share situation and background - More decontextualized
interpretation - Some genres (e.g. novels) depend on background
- Some genres require less context (e.g. lecture) information so that the reader can identify with
the characters




Spontaneity

, Spoken discourse Written discourse
- Disorganised and ungrammatical - Organised and grammatical
- Overlaps - More constrained in the way meaning can be
- Interruptions conveyed
- Sudden topic change - See only finished product
- Clarification
- Corrections


Repetition, hesitation, and redundancy:
Spoken discourse Written discourse
- Many repetitions
- Many hesitations
- Many redundancies
- Produced in real time, reflects speakers
production process
- Use of fillers ‘hm’, ‘eh’, etc.




Where do new media fit in?
- Short
- Often informal
- Some seem to reflect spoken language
- Emoticons
- Other writing conventions
- Audio
- Video
- Often visual
- Often studied using models for written or spoken language

Focus on the recipient
Spoken discourse
- Recipient provides feedback - Management of changing roles of
- Becomes speaker participants influences flow of discourse
- Alternation of roles
 Participation framework
Written discourse
- Writer anticipates information need
- Writer maintains readers interest
- Tries to create involvement with material and intend

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