Book review
Simona Pekarek Doehler, Elwys De Stefani & Anne-Sylvie Horlacher (eds.) Time and emergence in grammar:
Dislocation, topicalization and hanging topic in French talk-in-interaction
References (12)
References
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Du Bois, John W. & Rachel Giora. 2014. From cognitive-functional linguistics to dialogic syntax. Cognitive Linguistics 25 (3). 351–357.
Gregory, Michelle L. & Laura A. Michaelis. 2001. Topicalization and left-dislocation: A functional opposition revisited. Journal of Pragmatics 33(11). 1665–1705.
Hopper, Paul J. 1987. Emergent grammar. Berkeley Linguistics Society 131. 139–157.
Hopper, Paul J. 2001. Grammatical constructions and their discourse origins: Prototype or family resemblance? In Martin Pütz, Susanne Niemeier and René Dirven (eds.), Applied cognitive linguistics I: Theory and language acquisition, 109–129. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
Lambrecht, Knud. 1994. Information structure and sentence form: Topic, focus, and the mental representation of discourse referents. Cambridge: CUP.
Langacker, R. W. 2008. Cognitive grammar: A basic introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Netz, Hazar & Ron Kuzar. 2007. Three marked theme constructions in spoken English. Journal of Pragmatics 39(2). 305–335.
Pekarek Doehler, Simona. 2011. Emergent grammar for all practical purposes: The on-line formatting of left and right dislocations in French conversation. In Peter Auer & Stefan Pfänder (eds.), 45–87.
Prince, Ellen F. 1998. On the limits of syntax, with reference to left-dislocation and topicalization. Syntax and Semantics 29(3). 281–302.
Schegloff, Emanuel A. 2007. Sequence organization: A primer in conversation analysis. Cambridge: CUP.