Kapitel
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction. Pragmatic markers and peripheries 1
-
Part I. Defining the periphery
- Chapter 1. Discourse markers at the peripheries of syntax, intonation and turns 19
- Chapter 2. Dutch pragmatic markers in the left periphery 49
-
Part II. Left and right periphery on their own
- Chapter 3. Presentation followed by negotiation 77
- Chapter 4. Another ‘look!’ 111
-
Part III. Left versus right periphery
- Chapter 5. Verb-based discourse markers in Italian 143
- Chapter 6. Interactions between distribution and functional uses in Italian adversative pragmatic markers 171
- Chapter 7. The Lithuanian focus particles net ‘even’ and tik ‘only’ and clause peripheries 199
- Chapter 8. Žinai ‘you know’ in Lithuanian discourse 229
- Chapter 9. Second person parentheticals of unintentional visual perception in British English 251
- Chapter 10. Emoji as graphic discourse markers 277
-
Part IV. Peripheries across time
- Chapter 11. Functional asymmetry and left-to-right movement 303
- Chapter 12. The diachronic origin of English I mean and German ich meine 327
- Chapter 13. Pragmatic markers at the periphery and discourse prominence 351
-
Part V. Peripheries across languages
- Chapter 14. The Norwegian tag da in comparison to English then 385
- Chapter 15. A cross-linguistic look at the right periphery 415
- Index 449
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction. Pragmatic markers and peripheries 1
-
Part I. Defining the periphery
- Chapter 1. Discourse markers at the peripheries of syntax, intonation and turns 19
- Chapter 2. Dutch pragmatic markers in the left periphery 49
-
Part II. Left and right periphery on their own
- Chapter 3. Presentation followed by negotiation 77
- Chapter 4. Another ‘look!’ 111
-
Part III. Left versus right periphery
- Chapter 5. Verb-based discourse markers in Italian 143
- Chapter 6. Interactions between distribution and functional uses in Italian adversative pragmatic markers 171
- Chapter 7. The Lithuanian focus particles net ‘even’ and tik ‘only’ and clause peripheries 199
- Chapter 8. Žinai ‘you know’ in Lithuanian discourse 229
- Chapter 9. Second person parentheticals of unintentional visual perception in British English 251
- Chapter 10. Emoji as graphic discourse markers 277
-
Part IV. Peripheries across time
- Chapter 11. Functional asymmetry and left-to-right movement 303
- Chapter 12. The diachronic origin of English I mean and German ich meine 327
- Chapter 13. Pragmatic markers at the periphery and discourse prominence 351
-
Part V. Peripheries across languages
- Chapter 14. The Norwegian tag da in comparison to English then 385
- Chapter 15. A cross-linguistic look at the right periphery 415
- Index 449