Publication | Closed Access
On the Place of Linguistic Resources in the Organization of Talk-in-Interaction: Grammar as Action in Prompting a Speaker to Elaborate
242
Citations
20
References
2004
Year
Turn-takingPsycholinguisticsLinguistic ResourcesCommunicationSyntactic StructureLanguage LearningSpeech ActApplied LinguisticsSyntaxGrammarConversation AnalysisDiscourse AnalysisLanguage StudiesVerbal InteractionInteractional LinguisticsSpeech PerceptionSpeech ProductionSpeech CommunicationAbstract Specific PartsDiscourse StructureArtsGrammatical StructureLinguisticsPrior Speaker
Abstract Specific parts of grammatical structure can be employed by speakers to accomplish specifiable actions in talk-in-interaction. In this article, I describe the interactional use of "parts of speech" ordinarily used by individual speakers to connect elements within single turn-constructional units. The items employed for these held-in-common grammatical practices can also be deployed as stand-alone contributions that by their very incompleteness prompt a prior speaker to add another increment to their turn. As such, this constitutes a recipient-administered practice for expanding a turn at talk. I show that this usage constitutes another (previously undescribed) form of other-initiated repair that is designed to prompt a prior speaker to add a type-specific element found missing from an otherwise completed turn.
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