Szczepek-Reed2013
Szczepek-Reed2013 | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Szczepek-Reed2013 |
Author(s) | Beatrice Szczepek Reed |
Title | Glottalisation and word linking as resources for multi-unit turn construction in German talk-in-interaction: Initial observations |
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Tag(s) | EMCA, IL, glottalisation, turn continuation, word linking, German talk-in-interaction |
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Year | 2013 |
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Journal | Gesprächsforschung - Online-Zeitschrift zur verbalen Interaktion |
Volume | 14 |
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Pages | 8-30 |
URL | Link |
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Abstract
In spoken German, glottal stops are frequently inserted before word initial vowels (ʔewig) and at morphological boundaries (ʔurʔalt). As part of a conversation ana- lytic investigation into glottalisation in naturally occurring German, this pilot study is concerned with a specific conversational context in which variation be- tween glottalisation and direct linking from the end of one word to the beginning of the next are routinely employed. The context in question is multi-unit turn con- struction. It is found that in the pilot study corpus vowel-fronted TCUs that con- tinue an action-in-progress are frequently preceded by glottalisation; vowel- fronted TCUs that implement a new action, but are being integrated into an on- going turn, are typically linked across from preceding TCUs. This finding contra- dicts a potential hypothesis that action boundaries are always accompanied by phonetic ones. Instead, the participants in these data implement the opposite pat- tern: where there is an action boundary they delete the phonetic one, possibly in order to design their talk as continuing phonetically when sequentially it is not. These findings suggest that linguistic practices are not the result of interactional structure, but instead are resources for its implementation.
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