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E-raamat: Crosslinguistic Studies of Clause Combining: The multifunctionality of conjunctions

Edited by (University of Helsinki)
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The study of clause combining has been advanced lately by increasing interest in the study of actual language use in a typologically diverse set of languages. A number of received understandings have been challenged, among these the idea of clause combinations as being divisible into subordination and coordination in a binary fashion. Connected to this idea is the nature of conjunctions, a topic treated in several articles here. Couched within the larger issue of the nature of categoriality in language, several of the papers show that conjunctions are highly polyfunctional items, and that clause combining is only one of the uses to which speakers put them. Other topics treated in the volume are the historical development of conjunctions and the use of formulaic main clause constructions as projective units in conversation. The articles manifest both typological and theoretical breadth. They are based on data from Bulgarian, English, Estonian, Finnish, Indonesian, Japanese, and Spanish. The theoretical approaches include discourse-functional, interactional, historical and generative linguistics.
List of contributors
vii
Introduction ix
Ritva Laury
Sandra A. Thompson
From subordinate clause to noun-phrase: Yang constructions in colloquial Indonesian
1(34)
Robert Englebretson
On quotative constructions in Iberian Spanish
35(44)
Ricardo Etxepare
Bulgarian adversative connectives: Conjunctions or discourse markers?
79(20)
Grace E. Fielder
Projectability and clause combining in interaction
99(26)
Paul J. Hopper
Sandra A. Thompson
Conjunction and sequenced actions: The Estonian complementizer and evidential particle et
125(28)
Leelo Keevallik
Clause combining, interaction, evidentially, participation structure, and the conjunction-particle continuum: The Finnish etta
153(26)
Ritva Laury
Eeva-Leena Seppanen
The grammaticization of but as a final particle in English conversation
179(26)
Jean Mulder
Sandra A. Thompson
Quotative tte in Japanese: Its multifaceted functions and degrees of ``subordination''
205(26)
Shigeko Okamoto
Tsuyoshi Ono
Quoting and topic-marking: Some observations on the quotative tte construction in Japanese
231(16)
Ryoko Suzuki
Index of names 247(4)
Index of subjects 251