
Discourse Particles
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Content
- Intro
- Discourse Particles
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Introduction: Discourse particles: syntactic, semantic, pragmatic and historical aspects
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Issues under discussion in current research on discourse particles
- 3. Contributions of this book
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Part I. Diachronic issues and the development of discourse particles
- Chapter 1. On the adverbial origin of German modal particles
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Definition and general properties of modal particles
- 3. Origin and grammaticalization of German modal particles
- 3.1 Donor lexemes - a short state of the art
- 3.2 Donor lexemes - hypotheses
- 4. Which donor lexemes? Some empirical facts
- 4.1 "Real" adverbs
- 4.2 Predicatives
- 4.3 Sentence adverbs
- 4.4 Temporal adverbs
- 4.5 Conjunctions
- 4.6 Degree particles
- 4.7 Interim conclusions
- 5. Syntactic analysis of the grammaticalization of modal particles
- 6. Conclusions
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Appendix - other MPs
- Chapter 2. A particle-like use of hwæþer Wisdom's questions in Boethius
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Data sources and evidence base
- 2.1 The old English Boethius
- 2.2 Range of syntactic uses
- 2.3 More observations on unembedded hwæþer-questions
- 2.4 The pragmatics of unembedded hwæþer-questions
- 3. Old English hwæþer: The state of the art
- 3.1 The standard syntactic story
- 3.2 Synchronic problems with the standard syntactic story
- 3.3 Diachronic problems with the standard syntactic story
- 4. The stages and uses of hwæþer-questions
- 4.1 Gothic
- 4.2 Embedded sentences of type 2
- 4.3 Reanalysis
- 4.4 Varieties of actualization: Type 2 and type 5 examples
- 4.5 Irregularities resolved? Hwæþer questions with partial wh-movement
- 4.6 Type 3: Unembedded hwæþer questions
- 5. Summary and outlook
- References
- Chapter 3. The discourse particle es que in Spanish and in other Iberian languages
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Constructions with the sequence es que
- 3. v+comp vs. discourse particle
- 4. The status of es que in justificatory constructions
- 5. The historical process of the formation of the particle es que in Spanish
- 5.1 First Change: From a pseudo-cleft to a reduced cleft
- 5.2 Second change: From a reduced cleft to an inferential reduced cleft
- 5.3 Third change: From compound sentences to main clauses with the particle es-que
- 6. Catalan and Portuguese
- 7. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- References
- Corpus
- Part II. Syntactic analyses of discourse particles
- Chapter 4. Agreeing complementizers may just be moody
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The particles ya and so are complementizers
- 2.1 Evidence for the complementizer status of ya and so
- 2.2 Evidence for the complementizer status of ya and so
- 3. On the morphological distinctness of ya and so
- 3.1 What do the roots complementizers in laz mean?
- 3.2 Embedded ya and so
- 4. Final remarks
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Chapter 5. Outer particles vs tag particles: A distinction in homophony
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Introduction to discourse particles
- 2.1 Syntactic models for discourse particles: An overview
- 2.2 General overview of Basque particles
- 3. Appearances are deceptive
- 3.1 Intonation
- 3.2 Word order and syntax
- 3.3 Pragmatics
- 3.4 Interim summary
- 4. Accommodating tagPs in syntax
- 4.1 Previous accounts of the syntax of tagPs
- 4.2 Proposal
- 5. Conclusions
- Funding
- References
- Corpus references
- Chapter 6. Anchoring primary and secondary interjections to the context
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Discourse-linked secondary interjections
- 2.1 Emilian dialects
- 2.2 Venetan dialects
- 3. A hybrid class of secondary interjections
- 3.1 Emilian dialects
- 3.2 Venetan dialects
- 4. Non-integrated secondary interjections and contextual anchoring
- 4.1 Venetan dialects
- 4.2 On contextual anchoring
- 5. On the contextual anchoring of primary interjections
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 7. Sentence-final particles in mandarin Chinese: Syntax, semantics and acquisition
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The three-layered CP in Chinese: Overview and some in-depth case studies
- 2.1 Low CP
- 2.2 SFPs realizing forceP
- 2.3 Attitude phrase
- 3. The cartographic approach and the acquisition of SFPs
- 4. Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Part III. The semantic-pragmatics of discourse particles
- Chapter 8. Meaning and use of the basque particle bide
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Morphosyntactic characteristics of bide
- 3. Bide: Evidential and doxastic meaning
- 4. A speech-act theoretical account of bide
- 5. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- Abbreviations used
- References
- Corpus
- Chapter 9. Three German discourse particles as speech act modifiers
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The discourse model
- 3. Ja
- 4. Etwa & nicht
- 4.1 Nicht
- 4.2 Etwa
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Language index
- Subject index
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