A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø)

The three structural possibilities marking a noun with an English article are a, the, and Ø (the absence of an article). Although these structural possibilities are simple, they encode a multitude of semantic and pragmatic functions, and it is these complex form-function interactions that this stud...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Butler, Brian
Other Authors: Pederson, Eric
Language:en_US
Published: University of Oregon 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12975
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spelling ndltd-uoregon.edu-oai-scholarsbank.uoregon.edu-1794-129752018-12-20T05:48:06Z A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø) Butler, Brian Pederson, Eric Discourse grammar English articles ESL/EFL Identifiability Referentiality Semantic maps The three structural possibilities marking a noun with an English article are a, the, and Ø (the absence of an article). Although these structural possibilities are simple, they encode a multitude of semantic and pragmatic functions, and it is these complex form-function interactions that this study explores and explains using a semantic map model. The semantic map that is proposed contains three dimensions, which I refer to as Grammatical Number, Referentiality, and Discourse Mode. Each of these dimensions contains a number of further semantic values or pragmatic functions - which I will label "attributes" - that are implicated in English article choice. Various semantic map versions are tested and compared with a methodological approach that uses data collected in a controlled protocol from an elicited conversational discourse. The version that performed best is used as a basis for proposing a comprehensive semantic map that includes the following dimensions and dimensional attributes: a Number dimension with 3 attributes (singular, plural, and uncountable); a Referentiality dimension with 11 attributes, including 7 referential attributes that describe kinds of identifiability (proper names, shared lexis, shared speech situation, frame, current discourse, identifiable to speaker only ["new reference"], and identifiable to neither speaker nor listener [non-specific]) as well as 4 non-referential attributes (categorization, general non-referential expressions, finite verb [verb-object] "noun incorporation", and idioms); and a Discourse Mode dimension with 4 attributes (headline, immediacy, normal, and reintroducing). This model of English articles contributes to the field of research on articles as well as to the field of English language instruction and learning. In addition, it is suggested that the methodological paradigm used to test the semantic map model may be useful as an experimental paradigm for testing semantic maps of other constructions and languages. 2013-07-11T19:59:24Z 2013-07-11T19:59:24Z 2013-07-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12975 en_US All Rights Reserved. University of Oregon
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Discourse grammar
English articles
ESL/EFL
Identifiability
Referentiality
Semantic maps
spellingShingle Discourse grammar
English articles
ESL/EFL
Identifiability
Referentiality
Semantic maps
Butler, Brian
A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø)
description The three structural possibilities marking a noun with an English article are a, the, and Ø (the absence of an article). Although these structural possibilities are simple, they encode a multitude of semantic and pragmatic functions, and it is these complex form-function interactions that this study explores and explains using a semantic map model. The semantic map that is proposed contains three dimensions, which I refer to as Grammatical Number, Referentiality, and Discourse Mode. Each of these dimensions contains a number of further semantic values or pragmatic functions - which I will label "attributes" - that are implicated in English article choice. Various semantic map versions are tested and compared with a methodological approach that uses data collected in a controlled protocol from an elicited conversational discourse. The version that performed best is used as a basis for proposing a comprehensive semantic map that includes the following dimensions and dimensional attributes: a Number dimension with 3 attributes (singular, plural, and uncountable); a Referentiality dimension with 11 attributes, including 7 referential attributes that describe kinds of identifiability (proper names, shared lexis, shared speech situation, frame, current discourse, identifiable to speaker only ["new reference"], and identifiable to neither speaker nor listener [non-specific]) as well as 4 non-referential attributes (categorization, general non-referential expressions, finite verb [verb-object] "noun incorporation", and idioms); and a Discourse Mode dimension with 4 attributes (headline, immediacy, normal, and reintroducing). This model of English articles contributes to the field of research on articles as well as to the field of English language instruction and learning. In addition, it is suggested that the methodological paradigm used to test the semantic map model may be useful as an experimental paradigm for testing semantic maps of other constructions and languages.
author2 Pederson, Eric
author_facet Pederson, Eric
Butler, Brian
author Butler, Brian
author_sort Butler, Brian
title A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø)
title_short A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø)
title_full A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø)
title_fullStr A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø)
title_full_unstemmed A Semantic Map Approach to English Articles (a, the, and Ø)
title_sort semantic map approach to english articles (a, the, and ø)
publisher University of Oregon
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1794/12975
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