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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Main Author: Karen Velyan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Yerevan State University 2019-10-01
Series:Armenian Folia Anglistika
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ysu.am/index.php/arm-fol-angl/article/view/4270
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spelling 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
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