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Protocol: A qualitative linguistic framework for analysing empathic and empowering communications in classical person-centered therapeutic interactions
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Protocol: A Qualitative Linguistic Framework for Analysing Empathic and Empowering Communications in Classical Person-Centred Therapeutic Interactions
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Microaggression or misunderstanding? Implicatures, inferences and accountability
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Statistical approaches to hierarchical data in sociophonetics: The case of variable rhoticity in Scottish Standard English
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Metalinguistic conditionals and the role of explicit content
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The interactional achievement of speaker meaning: Toward a formal account of conversational inference
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The interactional achievement of speaker meaning: toward a formal account of conversational inference
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Classifying conditionals: The case of metalinguistic 'if you like'
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Elder, Chi-He. - : Cambridge Occasional Papers in Linguistics, 2015
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Abstract:
It is agreed that metalinguistic ‘if you like’ puts some aspect of communication into metalinguistic focus, serving the pragmatic function of commenting upon the appropriateness of the words uttered, but there is little consensus as to whether metalinguistic ‘if you like’ introduces a conditional. By taking observations from the International Corpus of English, this paper aims to show that utterances using metalinguistic ‘if you like’ belong in the class of conditional expressions. This is achieved by proposing pragmatic criteria to guide the categorisation of conditional expressions, where conditionality is not inherently linked to truth-conditional content. Next, this paper argues that ‘if you like’ can be classed in the broad category of speechact conditionals, where it is not the truth of the if-clause that provides the situations of truth of the main clause, but rather where the if-clause refers to the situations where the main clause is felicitously used. Finally, by utilising the semantic contextualist framework of Default Semantics (Jaszczolt 2010), this paper shows that ‘if you like’ is comparable to other if-clauses which overtly invoke a metalinguistic sense in a full phrase. In sum, this paper takes the case of ‘if you like’ as a case study in re-conceptualising the class of conditionals and truth-conditional content.
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URL: https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/55736/ https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/55736/1/COPIL7_Elder.pdf
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The underlying conditionality of conditionals which do not use 'if'
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Elder, Chi-He. - : Cambridge Occasional Papers in Linguistics, 2012
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The underlying conditionality of conditionals which do not use 'if'
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Elder, Chi-He. - : Cambridge Occasional Papers in Linguistics, 2012
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