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320 Pages·2017·13.377 MB·English
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COMMUNICATIVE FUNCTIONS AND LINGUISTIC FORMS IN SPEECH INTERACTION Prosody is generally studied at a separate linguistic level from syntax and semantics. It analyses phonetic properties of utterances such as pitch and prominence, and orders them into phonological categories such as pitch ac- cent, boundary tone and metrical grid. The goal is to defi ne distinctive formal differentiators of meanings in utterances. But what these meanings are is ei- ther excluded or a secondary concern. This book takes the opposite approach, asking what are the basic categories of meaning that speakers want to transmit to listeners? And what formal means do they use to achieve it? It places lin- guistic form in functions of speech communication, and takes into account all the formal exponents – sounds, words, syntax, prosodies – for specifi c func- tional coding. Basic communicative functions such as ‘questioning’ may be universally assumed, but their coding by linguistic bundles varies between languages. A comparison of function-form systems in English, German and Mandarin Chinese shows this formal diversity for universal functions. klaus j. kohler is Emeritus Professor at the University of Kiel, Germany and Honorary Professor at Nanjing Normal University, China. He was editor of Phonetica , the International Journal of Phonetic Science, for thirty-fi ve years. CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN LINGUISTICS General Editors: P. AUSTIN, J. BRESNAN, B. COMRIE, S. CRAIN, W. DRESSLER, C. J. EWEN, R. LASS, D. LIGHTFOOT, K. RICE, I. ROBERTS, S. ROMAINE, N. V. SMITH In this series 116. GILLIAN CATRIONA RAMCHAND : Verb meaning and the lexicon: a fi rst phase syntax 117. PIETER MUYSKEN : Functional categories 118. JUAN URIAGEREKA : Syntactic anchors: on semantic structuring 119. D . ROBERT LADD : Intonational phonology (second edition) 120. LEONARD H. BABBY : The syntax of argument structure 121. B. ELAN DRESHER : The contrastive hierarchy in phonology 122. DAVID ADGER , DANIEL HARBOUR and LAUREL J. WATKINS : Mirrors and microparameters: phrase structure beyond free word order 123. N IINA NING ZHANG : Coordination in syntax 124. NEIL SMITH : Acquiring phonology 125. NINA TOPINTZI : Onsets: suprasegmental and prosodic behaviour 126. C EDRIC BOECKX , NORBERT HORNSTEIN and JAIRO NUNES : Control as movement 127. M ICHAEL ISRAEL : The grammar of polarity: pragmatics, sensitivity, and the logic of scales 128. M . RITA MANZINI and LEONARDO M. SAVOIA : Grammatical categories: variation in romance languages 129. BARBARA CITKO : Symmetry in syntax: merge, move and labels 130. RACHEL WALKER : Vowel patterns in language 131. MARY DALRYMPLE and IRINA NIKOLAEVA : Objects and information structure 132. JERROLD M. SADOCK : The modular architecture of grammar 133. DUNSTAN BROWN and ANDREW HIPPISLEY : Network morphology: a defaults-based theory of word structure 134. B ETTELOU LOS , CORRIEN BLOM , GEERT BOOIJ , MARION ELENBAAS and A NS VAN KEMENADE : Morphosyntactic change: a comparative study of particles and prefi xes 135. S TEPHEN CRAIN : The emergence of meaning 136. HUBERT HAIDER : Symmetry breaking in syntax 137. JOSÉ A. CAMACHO : Null subjects 138. G REGORY STUMP and RAPHAEL A. FINKEL : Morphological typology: from word to paradigm 139. B RUCE TESAR : Output-driven phonology: theory and learning 140. ASIER ALCÁZAR and MARIO SALTARELLI : The syntax of imperatives 141. M ISHA BECKER : The acquisition of syntactic structure: animacy and thematic alignment 142. M ARTINA WILTSCHKO : The universal structure of categories: towards a formal typology 143. F AHAD RASHED AL-MUTAIRI : The minimalist program: the nature and plausibility of Chomsky’s biolinguistics 144. CEDRIC BOECKX : Elementary syntactic structures: prospects of a feature-free syntax 145. P HOEVOS PANAGIOTIDIS : Categorial features: a generative theory of word class categories 146. MARK BAKER : Case: its principles and its parameters 147. WILLIAM BENNETT : The phonology of consonants: dissimilation, harmony and correspondence 148. A NDREA SIMS : Infl ectional defectiveness 149. GREGORY STUMP : Infl ectional paradigms: content and form at the syntax-morphology interface 150. R OCHELLE L IEBER : English nouns: the ecology of nominalization 151. JOHN BOWERS : Deriving syntactic relations 152. A NA TERESA PÉREZ-LEROUX , MIHAELA PIRVULESCU and YVES ROBERGE : Direct objects and language acquisition 153. M ATTHEW BAERMAN , DUNSTAN BROWN and GREVILLE CORBETT : Morphological complexity 154. M ARCEL DEN DIKKEN : Dependency and directionality 155. LAURIE BAUER : Compounds and compounding 156. K LAUS J. KOHLER : Communicative functions and linguistic forms in speech interaction Earlier issues not listed are also available COMMUNICATIVE FUNCTIONS AND LINGUISTIC FORMS IN SPEECH INTERACTION KLAUS J. KOHLER University of Kiel, Germany University Printing House, Cambridge CB2 8BS, United Kingdom One Liberty Plaza, 20th Floor, New York, NY 10006, USA 477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, VIC 3207, Australia 314-321, 3rd Floor, Plot 3, Splendor Forum, Jasola District Centre, New Delhi - 110025, India 79 Anson Road, #06-04/06, Singapore 079906 Cambridge University Press is part of the University of Cambridge. It furthers the University’s mission by disseminating knowledge in the pursuit of education, learning, and research at the highest international levels of excellence. www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9781107170728 DOI: 10.1017/9781316756782 © Klaus J. Kohler 2018 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 2018 Printed in the United Kingdom by TJ International Ltd. A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library . Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data Names: Kohler, Klaus J., author. Title: Communicative functions and linguistic forms in speech interaction / Klaus J. Kohler, University of Kiel, Germany. Description: New York : Cambridge University Press, 2017. | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifi ers: LCCN 2017023080 | ISBN 9781107170728 (alk. paper) Subjects: LCSH: Versifi cation. | Functional discourse grammar. Classifi cation: LCC P311.K65 2017 | DDC 415.01/83 – dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017023080 ISBN 978-1-107-17072-8 Hardback Additional resources for this publication at www.cambridge.org./9781107170728 Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate. I wish to dedicate this book to my grandson Alexander, who, around the age of 15 months, started using the syllable sequence [ɁaɁa] with down-stepping pitch, accompanied by index-fi nger pointing, to direct his mummy’s attention to something he spotted in his action fi eld: an example of a pointing call on an elementary articulation carrier without words, which shows up the fundamental role of communicative functions besides phonemes, words and sentences in language acquisition and use . Contents Preface page xi Introduction 1 1 Speech Communication in Human Interaction 18 1.1 Human Interaction and the Organon Model 18 1.2 Deictic and Symbolic Fields in Speech Communication 23 1.3 From Function to Form 29 1.4 Descriptive Modelling of Prosody – An Overview of Paradigms 46 2 Prosody in a Functional Framework: The Kiel Intonation Model (KIM) 71 2.1 Prominence 71 2.2 Sentence Accent 78 2.3 Sentence Accents in Syntagmatic Prominence Patterns 82 2.4 Declination, Downstep and Upstep 87 2.5 Lexical Stress 94 2.6 Experiments in Lexical Stress Perception in German 97 2.7 Intonation 102 2.8 Experiments in Peak and Valley Synchronisation 108 2.9 Concatenation of Pitch Patterns 135 2.10 Contour-internal F0 Timing in Falls and Rises 139 2.11 Prehead and Register 144 2.12 Prosodic Phrasing 147 2.13 Microprosody 149 2.14 Stepping Patterns 150 2.15 Time-Windows in Speech Production 155 3 The Representation Function 164 3.1 Syntagmatic Organisation of Statements 166 3.2 Information Selection and Weighting 174 3.3 Argumentation 181 ix

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