Difference between revisions of "Steensig-Heinemann2013"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=INCOLLECTION |Author(s)=Jakob Steensig; Trine Heinemann; |Title=‘When “yes” is not enough – as an answer to a yes/no question |Editor(s)=Beatrice S...")
 
 
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|Author(s)=Jakob Steensig; Trine Heinemann;
 
|Author(s)=Jakob Steensig; Trine Heinemann;
 
|Title=‘When “yes” is not enough – as an answer to a yes/no question
 
|Title=‘When “yes” is not enough – as an answer to a yes/no question
|Editor(s)=Beatrice Szczepek Reed; Geoffrey Raymond,
+
|Editor(s)=Beatrice Szczepek Reed; Geoffrey Raymond;
 
|Tag(s)=IL; Answers; Yes/no; Danish; responses; confirmations; elaborations;
 
|Tag(s)=IL; Answers; Yes/no; Danish; responses; confirmations; elaborations;
 
|Key=Steensig-Heinemann2013
 
|Key=Steensig-Heinemann2013
|Publisher=John Benjamins Publishing
+
|Publisher=John Benjamins
 
|Year=2013
 
|Year=2013
 
|Address=Amsterdam / Philadelphia
 
|Address=Amsterdam / Philadelphia
|Booktitle=Units of Talk - Units of Action
+
|Booktitle=Units of Talk Units of Action
 
|Pages=207–242
 
|Pages=207–242
|URL=https://www.benjamins.com/#catalog/books/slsi.25.07ste/details
+
|URL=https://benjamins.com/catalog/slsi.25.07ste
 
|DOI=10.1075/slsi.25.07ste
 
|DOI=10.1075/slsi.25.07ste
 
|Abstract=This article investigates confirming answers to yes/no questions that consist of more than the type-conforming ‘yes’ token. The study is based on 160 cases of question-answer sequences with confirming answers, taken from a corpus of Danish interactions. The authors claim that certain actions, which are carried out as yes/no questions, demand a response unit that consists of ‘yes’ plus an elaboration. The actions that have this far-reaching projection are: (1) expansion-eliciting questions, (2) knowledge discrepancy questions, and (3) specification requests. The authors found no simple relationship between syntax and action. Some of the actions that demand more than a ‘yes’ can be carried out with both interrogative and declarative syntax, whereas others are done only interrogatively.
 
|Abstract=This article investigates confirming answers to yes/no questions that consist of more than the type-conforming ‘yes’ token. The study is based on 160 cases of question-answer sequences with confirming answers, taken from a corpus of Danish interactions. The authors claim that certain actions, which are carried out as yes/no questions, demand a response unit that consists of ‘yes’ plus an elaboration. The actions that have this far-reaching projection are: (1) expansion-eliciting questions, (2) knowledge discrepancy questions, and (3) specification requests. The authors found no simple relationship between syntax and action. Some of the actions that demand more than a ‘yes’ can be carried out with both interrogative and declarative syntax, whereas others are done only interrogatively.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 12:25, 2 December 2019

Steensig-Heinemann2013
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Steensig-Heinemann2013
Author(s) Jakob Steensig, Trine Heinemann
Title ‘When “yes” is not enough – as an answer to a yes/no question
Editor(s) Beatrice Szczepek Reed, Geoffrey Raymond
Tag(s) IL, Answers, Yes/no, Danish, responses, confirmations, elaborations
Publisher John Benjamins
Year 2013
Language
City Amsterdam / Philadelphia
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 207–242
URL Link
DOI 10.1075/slsi.25.07ste
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Units of Talk – Units of Action
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

This article investigates confirming answers to yes/no questions that consist of more than the type-conforming ‘yes’ token. The study is based on 160 cases of question-answer sequences with confirming answers, taken from a corpus of Danish interactions. The authors claim that certain actions, which are carried out as yes/no questions, demand a response unit that consists of ‘yes’ plus an elaboration. The actions that have this far-reaching projection are: (1) expansion-eliciting questions, (2) knowledge discrepancy questions, and (3) specification requests. The authors found no simple relationship between syntax and action. Some of the actions that demand more than a ‘yes’ can be carried out with both interrogative and declarative syntax, whereas others are done only interrogatively.

Notes