Go to main content
Formats
Format
BibTeX
MARCXML
TextMARC
MARC
DublinCore
EndNote
NLM
RefWorks
RIS

Linked e-resources

Details

Acknowledgments; Contents; Contributors; Introduction; References; Part I The (Social) Praxis of Indirect Reports; Indirect Reporting in Bilingual Language Production; 1 Introduction; 2 Understanding Indirect Reporting; 3 Role of Emergent Situational Salience in Indirect Reporting; 4 Objectives; 5 Data Collection Methods; 6 Results; 6.1 Statements; 6.2 Questions; 6.3 Request/Command; 7 Discussion; 8 Conclusion; References; Reported Speech: A Clinical Pragmatic Perspective; 1 Introduction; 2 Linguistic and Cognitive Dimensions of Reported Speech; 3 Clinical Research on Reported Speech

4 Future Clinical Research on Reported Speech5 Summary; References; On the (Complicated) Relationship Between Direct and Indirect Reports; 1 Introduction; 2 Opacity; 2.1 Transformations in Direct and Indirect Reports; 2.2 Elimination; 2.3 Expansions; 2.4 Interjections in Indirect Reports; 2.4.1 Paraphrasis/Form Principle; 2.5 Pronominals; 2.6 Ungrammaticality; 2.7 Summaries; 2.8 Reference to Sexual Organs; 2.9 Voice; 2.10 The use of Clitics; 2.11 Future Topics; 3 Conclusion; References; Indirect and Direct Reports in Hungarian; 1 Introduction; 2 The Reporting Clause

3 What Can Be Reported and What Cannot4 The Reporting Verb; 5 The Transitivity Cline; 6 Conclusion; References; Indirect Reports, Quotation and Narrative; 1 Introduction; 2 Some Observations; 3 Research Questions; 4 Epistemic Entitlement, Telling Rights; 5 Speech Act Considerations; 6 She Said She ... Versus She Said, `I ... '; 7 Re-Telling Your Own Story; 8 Retelling Your Own Story as an Indirect Report; 9 Conclusions; References; Reporting, Dialogue, and the Role of Grammar; 1 Introduction; 2 Direct vs. Indirect Discourse; 3 Mentioning Devices in Dialogue

3.1 Dialogue Phenomena: Echoing and Grounding4 Ginzburg and Cooper (2014); 4.1 Utterance Events and TTR Representations; 4.1.1 Utterance Events in DRT; 4.1.2 Utterance Events in TTR; 4.2 TTR-Modelling of Reporting Constructions; 4.2.1 Grounding and Clarification; 4.2.2 Locutionary Propositions and Abstract Semantic Objects; 4.2.3 Pure Quotation; 4.2.4 Direct and Indirect Quotation; 5 Free (In)direct Discourse, Mixed Quotation, Hybrid Uses; 6 Dynamic Syntax; 6.1 Incrementality/Predictivity and Radical Contextual-Dependency in the Grammar; 6.2 Split Utterances in Dynamic Syntax

6.3 Metalinguistic Devices in DS-TTR7 Conclusion; References; Indirect Reports and Workplace Norms; 1 Indirect Reports in Workplace Talk; 2 Workplace Narratives and Socialisation; 3 Community of Practice: Theoretical Approach; 4 How Indirect Reports Convey Professional Norms; 5 Narratives as Expressions of Norms and the Role of Indirect Speech; 6 Indirect Reports for Socialisation Purposes; Note; References; Indirect Reported Speech in Interaction; 1 Introduction; 2 The Design of IRS; 3 IRS in Introductory Detailing During Storytelling; 4 Summary and Conclusion; References

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export