Difference between revisions of "Kendrick2020a"

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{{BibEntry
 
{{BibEntry
 +
|BibType=INCOLLECTION
 +
|Author(s)=Kobin H. Kendrick;
 +
|Title=Recruitment in English: A quantitative study
 +
|Editor(s)=Simeon Floyd; Giovanni Rossi; N. J. Enfield;
 +
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Recruitment
 
|Key=Kendrick2020a
 
|Key=Kendrick2020a
|Key=Kendrick2020a
 
|Title=Recruitment in English: A quantitative study
 
|Author(s)=Kobin H. Kendrick;
 
|Tag(s)=
 
|Editor(s)=Simeon Floyd; Giovanni Rossi; N. J. Enfield;
 
|Booktitle=Getting others to do things: a pragmatic typology of recruitments
 
|BibType=INCOLLECTION
 
 
|Publisher=Language Science Press
 
|Publisher=Language Science Press
 
|Year=2020
 
|Year=2020
 +
|Language=English
 +
|Address=Berlin
 +
|Booktitle=Getting others to do things: a pragmatic typology of recruitments
 
|Pages=93–146
 
|Pages=93–146
|Note=http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4018376
+
|URL=https://zenodo.org/record/4018376
 +
|DOI=10.5281/zenodo.4018376
 +
|Abstract=This chapter describes the resources that speakers of English use when recruiting assistance from others in everyday social interaction. The chapter draws on data from video recordings of informal conversation in English, and reports language-specific findings generated within a large-scale comparative project involving eight languages from five continents (see other chapters of this volume). The resources for recruitment described in this chapter include linguistic structures from across the levels of grammatical organization, as well as gestural and other visible and contextual resources of relevance to the interpretation of action in interaction. The presentation of categories of recruitment, and elements of recruitment sequences, follows the coding scheme used in the comparative project (see Chapter 2 of the volume). This chapter extends our knowledge of the structure and usage of English with detailed attention to the properties of sequential structure in conversational interaction.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 03:43, 16 August 2023

Kendrick2020a
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Kendrick2020a
Author(s) Kobin H. Kendrick
Title Recruitment in English: A quantitative study
Editor(s) Simeon Floyd, Giovanni Rossi, N. J. Enfield
Tag(s) EMCA, Recruitment
Publisher Language Science Press
Year 2020
Language English
City Berlin
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 93–146
URL Link
DOI 10.5281/zenodo.4018376
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Getting others to do things: a pragmatic typology of recruitments
Chapter

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Abstract

This chapter describes the resources that speakers of English use when recruiting assistance from others in everyday social interaction. The chapter draws on data from video recordings of informal conversation in English, and reports language-specific findings generated within a large-scale comparative project involving eight languages from five continents (see other chapters of this volume). The resources for recruitment described in this chapter include linguistic structures from across the levels of grammatical organization, as well as gestural and other visible and contextual resources of relevance to the interpretation of action in interaction. The presentation of categories of recruitment, and elements of recruitment sequences, follows the coding scheme used in the comparative project (see Chapter 2 of the volume). This chapter extends our knowledge of the structure and usage of English with detailed attention to the properties of sequential structure in conversational interaction.

Notes