Home Linguistics & Semiotics Chapter 7. Some notes on the Hearts and Navy excerpts according to the Language into Act Theory
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Chapter 7. Some notes on the Hearts and Navy excerpts according to the Language into Act Theory

  • Emanuela Cresti and Massimo Moneglia
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Abstract

The paper sketches the Language into Act Theory and how it catches the difference between the Navy monologue and the Hearts dialogue. According to L-AcT, two types of reference units, both ending with a prosodic terminal break are identified: utterance matching with a single speech act and stanza expressing a flow of thought through an adjunction process. Navy is a sequence of two narrative stanzas with a complex informational organization, while Hearts is organized in 11 utterances showing high illocutionary variation. The core of the information pattern is the Comment accomplishing the illocutionary force. The information structure, expressing a closed set of functions, is in one-to-one correspondence with the prosodic structure. The linguistic content is not compositional across information units.

Abstract

The paper sketches the Language into Act Theory and how it catches the difference between the Navy monologue and the Hearts dialogue. According to L-AcT, two types of reference units, both ending with a prosodic terminal break are identified: utterance matching with a single speech act and stanza expressing a flow of thought through an adjunction process. Navy is a sequence of two narrative stanzas with a complex informational organization, while Hearts is organized in 11 utterances showing high illocutionary variation. The core of the information pattern is the Comment accomplishing the illocutionary force. The information structure, expressing a closed set of functions, is in one-to-one correspondence with the prosodic structure. The linguistic content is not compositional across information units.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents vii
  3. Acknowledgments xi
  4. Introduction. In search of a basic unit of spoken language 1
  5. Part I
  6. Chapter 1. Russian spoken discourse 35
  7. Chapter 2. The basic unit of spoken language and the interfaces between prosody, discourse and syntax 77
  8. Chapter 3. Prosody and the organization of information in Central Pomo, a California indigenous language 107
  9. Chapter 4. Syntactic and prosodic segmentation in spoken French 127
  10. Chapter 5. Design and annotation of two-level utterance units in Japanese 155
  11. Chapter 6. The pragmatic analysis of speech and its illocutionary classification according to the Language into Act Theory 181
  12. Chapter 7. Illocution as a unit of reference for spontaneous speech 221
  13. Chapter 8. Narrative discourse segmentation in clinical linguistics 257
  14. Chapter 9. Cross-linguistic comparison of automatic detection of speech breaks in read and narrated speech in four languages 285
  15. Part II
  16. Same texts, different approaches to segmentation 303
  17. Chapter 1. Segmentation and analysis of the two English excerpts 309
  18. Chapter 2. Analysis of two English spontaneous speech examples with the dependency incremental prosodic structure model 327
  19. Chapter 3. Applying criteria of spontaneous Hebrew speech segmentation to English 337
  20. Chapter 4. Basic units of speech segmentation 349
  21. Chapter 5. Segmentation of the English texts Navy and Hearts with SUU and LUU 359
  22. Chapter 6. The Moscow approach to local discourse structure 367
  23. Chapter 7. Some notes on the Hearts and Navy excerpts according to the Language into Act Theory 383
  24. Chapter 8. Comparing annotations for the prosodic segmentation of spontaneous speech 403
  25. Index 433
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