Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken Burmese

This paper is part of a larger research project on the ‘Comparative analysis of discourse markers in Burmese and in English’, and the product of my attempt to identify so-called particles in Burmese in terms of their discourse functions. Particles are bound morphemes, many of which do not have one-...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: San San Hnin Tun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Irish Association for Applied Linguistics 2019-08-01
Series:Teanga: The Journal of the Irish Association for Applied Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.iraal.ie/index.php/teanga/article/view/175
id doaj-52749bc53cc44ae083fc5d895af67df9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-52749bc53cc44ae083fc5d895af67df92020-11-25T03:07:55ZengThe Irish Association for Applied LinguisticsTeanga: The Journal of the Irish Association for Applied Linguistics 0332-205X2565-63252019-08-0121Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken BurmeseSan San Hnin Tun0University of Nottingham and Cornell University This paper is part of a larger research project on the ‘Comparative analysis of discourse markers in Burmese and in English’, and the product of my attempt to identify so-called particles in Burmese in terms of their discourse functions. Particles are bound morphemes, many of which do not have one-to-one equivalents in English. In traditional grammars, these lexical items are usually described in terms of their syntactic distribution: these studies present different kinds of sentential environments, but often fall short of a systematic generalization describing their semantic or pragmatic properties. A corpus-based study of spoken Burmese in different genres, within the framework of Discourse Analysis, suggests that particles often have prominent discourse functions, and many are in fact used primarily for their discourse functions in natural spoken discourse, in which propositional meaning remains the same with or without the particles. https://journal.iraal.ie/index.php/teanga/article/view/175discourse features in spoken BurmeseBurmeseCorpus LinguisticsParticles
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author San San Hnin Tun
spellingShingle San San Hnin Tun
Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken Burmese
Teanga: The Journal of the Irish Association for Applied Linguistics
discourse features in spoken Burmese
Burmese
Corpus Linguistics
Particles
author_facet San San Hnin Tun
author_sort San San Hnin Tun
title Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken Burmese
title_short Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken Burmese
title_full Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken Burmese
title_fullStr Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken Burmese
title_full_unstemmed Not a study of English! A corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken Burmese
title_sort not a study of english! a corpus analysis of discourse features in spoken burmese
publisher The Irish Association for Applied Linguistics
series Teanga: The Journal of the Irish Association for Applied Linguistics
issn 0332-205X
2565-6325
publishDate 2019-08-01
description This paper is part of a larger research project on the ‘Comparative analysis of discourse markers in Burmese and in English’, and the product of my attempt to identify so-called particles in Burmese in terms of their discourse functions. Particles are bound morphemes, many of which do not have one-to-one equivalents in English. In traditional grammars, these lexical items are usually described in terms of their syntactic distribution: these studies present different kinds of sentential environments, but often fall short of a systematic generalization describing their semantic or pragmatic properties. A corpus-based study of spoken Burmese in different genres, within the framework of Discourse Analysis, suggests that particles often have prominent discourse functions, and many are in fact used primarily for their discourse functions in natural spoken discourse, in which propositional meaning remains the same with or without the particles.
topic discourse features in spoken Burmese
Burmese
Corpus Linguistics
Particles
url https://journal.iraal.ie/index.php/teanga/article/view/175
work_keys_str_mv AT sansanhnintun notastudyofenglishacorpusanalysisofdiscoursefeaturesinspokenburmese
_version_ 1724668462788247552