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E-raamat: Subordination in Conversation: A cross-linguistic perspective

Edited by (University of Helsinki), Edited by (Keio University)
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The articles in this volume examine the notion of clausal subordination based on English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German and Japanese conversational data. Some of the articles approach ‘subordination’ in terms of social action, taking into account what participants are doing with their talk, considering topics such as the use of clauses as projector phrases and as devices for organizing the participant structure of the conversation. Other articles focus on the emergence of clause combinations diachronically and synchronically, taking on topics such as the grammaticalization of clauses and conjunctions into discourse markers, and the continuum nature of syntactic subordination. In all of the articles, linguistic forms are considered to be emergent from recurrent practices engaged in by participants in conversation. The contributions critically examine central syntactic notions in interclausal relations and their relevance to the description of clause combining in conversational language, to the structure of conversation, and to the interactional functions of language.
List of contributors
vii
Introduction 1(10)
Ritva Laury
Ryoko Suzuki
N be that-constructions in everyday German conversation: A reanalysis of `die Sache ist/das Ding ist' (`the thing is')-clauses as projector phrases
11(26)
Susanne Gunthner
Interrogative "complements" and question design in Estonian
37(32)
Leelo Keevallik
Syntactic and actional characteristics of Finnish etta-clauses
69(34)
Aino Koivisto
Ritva Laury
Eeva-Leena Seppanen
Clause-combining and the sequencing of actions: Projector constructions in French talk-in-interaction
103(46)
Simona Pekarek Doehler
A note on the emergence of quotative constructions in Japanese conversation
149(16)
Ryoko Suzuki
Clines of subordination - constructions with the German `complement-taking predicate' glauben
165(26)
Wolfgang Imo
Are kara `because'-clauses causal subordinate clauses in present-day Japanese?
191(18)
Yuko Higashiizumi
Teyuuka and I mean as pragmatic parentheticals in Japanese and English
209(30)
Ritva Laury
Shigeko Okamoto
Name index 239(4)
Subject index 243