Linear Unit Grammar
Integrating speech and writing
This book explores the role of chunking in the description of discourse, especially spoken discourse. It appears that chunking offers a sound but flexible platform on which can be built a descriptive model which is more open and comprehensive than more familiar approaches to structural description. The model remains linear, in that it avoids hierarchies, and it concentrates on the combinatorial patterns of text.
The linear approach turns out to have many advantages, bringing together under one descriptive method a wide variety of different styles of speech and writing. It is complementary to established grammars, but it raises pertinent questions about many of their assumptions.
Table of Contents
Dedication
|
vii
|
Acknowledgements
|
ix
|
Preamble
|
xi–xiii
|
Introduction
|
xv–xxi
|
Section A: Preliminaries
|
1
|
Setting the scene
|
3–22
|
Background
|
23–40
|
Data description
|
41–45
|
Section B: Analysis
|
47
|
System of analysis
|
49–54
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Provisional Unit Boundaries
|
55–58
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Types of chunks
|
59–70
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Types of organisational elements
|
71–78
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Types of increments to shared experience
|
79–89
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Synthesis
|
91–103
|
Section C: Theory and follow-up
|
105
|
The example texts analysed |
107–127
|
Theoretical synopsis
|
129–144
|
Looking ahead
|
145–166
|
Appendix
|
167–173
|
Bibliography
|
175–179
|
Index of names
|
181–182
|
Index of subjects
|
183–185
|
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