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11 ‘By letters from Riga we have advice’: Historical news discourse
-
Andreas Jucker
and Irma Taavitsainen
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of figures and tables ix
- To readers xi
- 1 Historical pragmatics: Communicative patterns of the past 1
- 2 The widening perspectives of the digital era: Data in historical pragmatics 13
- 3 Excavating usage patterns: Methods in historical pragmatics 31
- 4 ‘Lo, which a greet thyng is affeccioun!’: Discourse markers and interjections 54
- 5 ‘For I thou thee, thou Traitor’: Terms of address 73
- 6 ‘No one can flatter so prettily as you do’: Speech acts 92
- 7 ‘For your curteisie’: Forms of politeness and impoliteness 113
- 8 The pragmatics of language change: Grammaticalisation and pragmaticalisation 130
- 9 ‘Take a pounde of sugir and halfe a pounde of tendir roses lyues . . .’: Genres and text types 146
- 10 ‘I pray thee friend Humfrey, what is phisicke?’: Scientific and medical discourse 164
- 11 ‘By letters from Riga we have advice’: Historical news discourse 183
- 12 ‘Fire! Help! Sir Walter has studied till his Head’s on fire’: Narrative patterns and historical pragmatics 200
- Corpora and other electronic data sources 218
- References 220
- Index 234
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of figures and tables ix
- To readers xi
- 1 Historical pragmatics: Communicative patterns of the past 1
- 2 The widening perspectives of the digital era: Data in historical pragmatics 13
- 3 Excavating usage patterns: Methods in historical pragmatics 31
- 4 ‘Lo, which a greet thyng is affeccioun!’: Discourse markers and interjections 54
- 5 ‘For I thou thee, thou Traitor’: Terms of address 73
- 6 ‘No one can flatter so prettily as you do’: Speech acts 92
- 7 ‘For your curteisie’: Forms of politeness and impoliteness 113
- 8 The pragmatics of language change: Grammaticalisation and pragmaticalisation 130
- 9 ‘Take a pounde of sugir and halfe a pounde of tendir roses lyues . . .’: Genres and text types 146
- 10 ‘I pray thee friend Humfrey, what is phisicke?’: Scientific and medical discourse 164
- 11 ‘By letters from Riga we have advice’: Historical news discourse 183
- 12 ‘Fire! Help! Sir Walter has studied till his Head’s on fire’: Narrative patterns and historical pragmatics 200
- Corpora and other electronic data sources 218
- References 220
- Index 234