Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of English
Spontaneous spoken language is known to be rich in fragmented and nonintegrated chunks of speech. The latter are the result of syntactic “accidents”, which are indispensible elements of spontaneous talk. Caused by a variety of pragmatic factors, syntactic accidents differ in their formal, lexical,...
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Yerevan State University
2019-10-01
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doaj-f70dbc9f19904a6cb9b60ad6ddfdbf852021-09-24T09:09:00ZengYerevan State UniversityArmenian Folia Anglistika1829-24292579-30392019-10-01152 (20)10.46991/AFA/2019.15.2.038Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of EnglishKaren Velyan0Chair of General Linguistics and Theory of Communication, Yerevan Brusov State University of Languages and Social Sciences Spontaneous spoken language is known to be rich in fragmented and nonintegrated chunks of speech. The latter are the result of syntactic “accidents”, which are indispensible elements of spontaneous talk. Caused by a variety of pragmatic factors, syntactic accidents differ in their formal, lexical, and distributional features. With these features in view, we single out three main varieties of syntactic accidents: 1. maxi-accidents, 2. mini-accidents and 3. micro-accidents, which collectively constitute one whole paradigm. Within the framework of the present article, the main focus of the analysis is on maxi-accidents in spontaneous talk of middle-class native speakers of English. Based on the empirical data, the analysis outlines the key functional properties of maxi-accidents, such as their frequency of occurrence, positional characteristics and pragmatic reasons that lie behind maxi-accidents. https://journals.ysu.am/index.php/arm-fol-angl/article/view/4270maxi-accidentsspontaneous talkdistributional propertiesplanning of ideaslexical changeinterrupted fragment |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Karen Velyan |
spellingShingle |
Karen Velyan Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of English Armenian Folia Anglistika maxi-accidents spontaneous talk distributional properties planning of ideas lexical change interrupted fragment |
author_facet |
Karen Velyan |
author_sort |
Karen Velyan |
title |
Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of English |
title_short |
Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of English |
title_full |
Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of English |
title_fullStr |
Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of English |
title_full_unstemmed |
Syntactic Maxi-Accidents in Spontaneous Speech of Middle-Class Speakers of English |
title_sort |
syntactic maxi-accidents in spontaneous speech of middle-class speakers of english |
publisher |
Yerevan State University |
series |
Armenian Folia Anglistika |
issn |
1829-2429 2579-3039 |
publishDate |
2019-10-01 |
description |
Spontaneous spoken language is known to be rich in fragmented and nonintegrated chunks of speech. The latter are the result of syntactic “accidents”, which are indispensible elements of spontaneous talk. Caused by a variety of pragmatic factors, syntactic accidents differ in their formal, lexical, and distributional features. With these features in view, we single out three main varieties of syntactic accidents: 1. maxi-accidents, 2. mini-accidents and 3. micro-accidents, which collectively constitute one whole paradigm.
Within the framework of the present article, the main focus of the analysis is on maxi-accidents in spontaneous talk of middle-class native speakers of English. Based on the empirical data, the analysis outlines the key functional properties of maxi-accidents, such as their frequency of occurrence, positional characteristics and pragmatic reasons that lie behind maxi-accidents.
|
topic |
maxi-accidents spontaneous talk distributional properties planning of ideas lexical change interrupted fragment |
url |
https://journals.ysu.am/index.php/arm-fol-angl/article/view/4270 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT karenvelyan syntacticmaxiaccidentsinspontaneousspeechofmiddleclassspeakersofenglish |
_version_ |
1717369987857907712 |