Article published in:
The Dynamics of Linguistic Variation: Corpus evidence on English past and presentEdited by Terttu Nevalainen, Irma Taavitsainen, Päivi Pahta and Minna Korhonen
[Studies in Language Variation 2] 2008
► pp. 37–60
Self-repetition in spoken English discourse
Göran Kjellmer | University of Gothenburg
The objects of the present paper are, first, to chart the occurrence of selfrepetition in the spoken British module “ukspok” in the Cobuild Corpus, and secondly, to present evidence to show that repetition serves a great number of functions, and that far from being an obstacle it is a helpful and sometimes even necessary ingredient for everyday conversation to be successful. It was found that repetititon is a ubiquitous phenomenon in the spoken language and is very often used in preparation for long and complex sentences. It was also found that men have a much higher rate of repetition-introduced turns than women, and that men’s repetition-introduced sentences are much longer than women’s.
Published online: 03 December 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.2.06kje
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.2.06kje
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