Nen assentives and the phenomenon of dialogic parallelisms
Nicholas Evans | Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
A task for ontolinguistics is to delimit the set of grammatical devices sensitive to the speech-act nexus – whether speech-act role (speaker, hearer, etc.), knowledge asymmetries (ignoratives and demonstratives), speech-act goals (imperatives, questions, etc.), or social relations (e.g. honorifics). These devices are co-constructed by speaker-hearer dyads, and a convincing framework for dealing with them needs a typology of dialogic parallelisms: grammatical constructions in which there are tight formal and grammatical links between the contributions of the two parties. In the first part of this chapter I survey a number of known phenomena, including interrogative-demonstrative parallelisms, question-answer parallels, and conjunct/disjunct systems. In the second part I introduce a further, previously unreported example of dialogic parallelisms: assentives are a category used to supply assenting answers to imperatives. In the Papuan language Nen these show tight formal parallels to imperatives. I conclude by arguing for the need for greater attention to dialogic coordination in the shaping of core grammatical morphology. Keywords: adjacency pairs; conversational analysis; dialogism; ignoratives; interaction
2017. Did language evolve in multilingual settings?. Biology & Philosophy 32:6 ► pp. 905 ff.
Evans, Nicholas
2022. Pushing the boundaries: Marginal phonemes and dialogic interaction. Russian Journal of Linguistics 26:4 ► pp. 995 ff.
Evans, Nicholas & Julia Colleen Miller
2016. Nen. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 46:3 ► pp. 331 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 16 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.