Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley Malay
<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p>This paper examines a group of small morphemes analysed as “utterance-final particles” in the Malay variety of the Klang Valley, West Malaysia. It provides...
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University of Indonesia
2018-10-01
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doaj-aeb56e914e77485283a9037248d2acf22021-07-08T04:08:08ZengUniversity of IndonesiaWacana: Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia1411-22722407-68992018-10-0119229132610.17510/wacana.v19i2.704501Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley MalayTom Gunner Hoogervorst0(Scopus ID: 38662538600; h-index: 3), International Institute of Asian Studies, Leiden<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p>This paper examines a group of small morphemes analysed as “utterance-final particles” in the Malay variety of the Klang Valley, West Malaysia. It provides a preliminary investigation into their usage and diachronic evolution, connecting fieldwork-based findings with extant research on other Malay varieties. There is no univocal definition of utterance-final particles – known by other scholars as “discourse particles” or “pragmatic particles” – nor broad agreement on the term’s conceptual validity. Most previous research on Malay varieties approaches these units as unbound morphemes with no grammatical and little obvious lexical meaning, relegating their functionality to the realm of pragmatics. This study calls attention to data from Klang Valley Malay to demonstrate that particles cannot easily be divided into “grammatical” and “pragmatic” categories. Most utterance-final particles discussed here are etymologically derived from verbs, adverbs, interjections and other word classes and can at best be classified as “part-time” pragmatic particles. They display varying levels of grammaticality and pragmaticality depending on their intonation and syntactic position.</p></div></div></div>http://wacana.ui.ac.id/index.php/wjhi/article/view/704utterance-final particlesklang valley malaygrammaticalizationpragmaticalizationcolloquial malay |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Tom Gunner Hoogervorst |
spellingShingle |
Tom Gunner Hoogervorst Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley Malay Wacana: Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia utterance-final particles klang valley malay grammaticalization pragmaticalization colloquial malay |
author_facet |
Tom Gunner Hoogervorst |
author_sort |
Tom Gunner Hoogervorst |
title |
Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley Malay |
title_short |
Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley Malay |
title_full |
Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley Malay |
title_fullStr |
Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley Malay |
title_full_unstemmed |
Utterance-final particles in Klang Valley Malay |
title_sort |
utterance-final particles in klang valley malay |
publisher |
University of Indonesia |
series |
Wacana: Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia |
issn |
1411-2272 2407-6899 |
publishDate |
2018-10-01 |
description |
<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p>This paper examines a group of small morphemes analysed as “utterance-final particles” in the Malay variety of the Klang Valley, West Malaysia. It provides a preliminary investigation into their usage and diachronic evolution, connecting fieldwork-based findings with extant research on other Malay varieties. There is no univocal definition of utterance-final particles – known by other scholars as “discourse particles” or “pragmatic particles” – nor broad agreement on the term’s conceptual validity. Most previous research on Malay varieties approaches these units as unbound morphemes with no grammatical and little obvious lexical meaning, relegating their functionality to the realm of pragmatics. This study calls attention to data from Klang Valley Malay to demonstrate that particles cannot easily be divided into “grammatical” and “pragmatic” categories. Most utterance-final particles discussed here are etymologically derived from verbs, adverbs, interjections and other word classes and can at best be classified as “part-time” pragmatic particles. They display varying levels of grammaticality and pragmaticality depending on their intonation and syntactic position.</p></div></div></div> |
topic |
utterance-final particles klang valley malay grammaticalization pragmaticalization colloquial malay |
url |
http://wacana.ui.ac.id/index.php/wjhi/article/view/704 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tomgunnerhoogervorst utterancefinalparticlesinklangvalleymalay |
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