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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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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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Abstract:
In addressing a question at the semantics-pragmatics interface of how conditionals in English should be categorised, this paper addresses the underlying question: what is a conditional? Conditionals in English are very often associated with the canonical pattern ‘if p then q’. But while the word 'if' provides a simple function to aid us in expressing our conditional thought, it goes without saying that conditional thought does not go hand in hand with the single word 'if'. This paper explores some of the ways that conditionals may be expressed in English without using if by presenting observations obtained from the International Corpus of English (ICE-GB) combined with results from previous empirical studies (e.g. Declerck & Reed 2001). In doing so, this paper considers the question what exactly it is to be a conditional, proposing some criteria to guide the categorisation of conditional expressions. In turn, this paper aims to shed some light as to why conditionals using 'if' are so often focussed upon.
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URL: https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/55735/1/6_elder.pdf https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/55735/
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