Hopper2021

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Hopper2021
BibType ARTICLE
Key Hopper2021
Author(s) Paul J. Hopper
Title “You turn your back and there’s somebody moving in”. Syntactic anacrusis in spoken English
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, coordination, anacrustic/anacrusis, emergent grammar, biclausal, construction, boosting, conditional, speech acts, mirativity, style
Publisher
Year 2021
Language English
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Month
Journal Interactional Linguistics
Volume 1
Number 1
Pages 64–89
URL Link
DOI 10.1075/il.20009.hop
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
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Edition
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Howpublished
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Abstract

Anacrustic Coordination (AC) is a type of biclausal conjunction such that an initial clause or phrase sets up a state of affairs and is followed by and and a strongly focused second clause, for example three years it’s been sitting here and I haven’t done it. AC figures in a number of kinds of interaction. One is the topic/comment conditional, as in call it up and there’s something that actually says your number. It is a possibility for enhancing certain illocutionary acts such as threats and warnings: I’m gonna take that and I’m gonna dig it into you. It is a basis for syntactic mirativity, the coding of surprise and unexpectedness (DeLancey 1997): you turn your back and there’s somebody moving in. AC raises questions about the nature of constructions and of Construction Grammar.

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