How subjective are Mandarin reason connectives? A corpus study of spontaneous conversation, microblog and newspaper discourse
Abstract Studies in several languages find that causal connectives differ from one another in their prototypical meaning and use , which provides insight into language users’ cognitive categorization of causal relations in discourse. Subjectivity plays a vital role in this process. Using an integrat...
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Published in | Language and linguistics (Taipei) Vol. 22; no. 1; pp. 166 - 211 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
01.01.2021
|
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Abstract
Studies in several languages find that causal connectives differ from one another in their prototypical
meaning and use
, which provides insight into language users’ cognitive categorization of causal relations in discourse. Subjectivity plays a vital role in this process. Using an integrated subjectivity approach, this study aims to give a comprehensive picture of the semantic-pragmatic distinctions between Mandarin
reason
connectives
jìrán
‘since’
, yīnwèi
and
yóuyú
‘because’. The data come from spontaneous conversation, microblog, and newspaper discourse, while most previous studies have focused only on written data. The results show that, despite the contextual differences in discourse from each corpus, the connectives display distinctive and robust profiles.
Jìrán
is subjective. It prototypically expresses
speech act
and
epistemic
causalities featuring
speech act
and
judgment
in the consequent.
Speaker SoC
(subject of consciousness) is actively involved yet remains
implicit
in the utterances.
Yóuyú
, by contrast, is objective. It typically expresses
volitional
and
non-volitional content
causalities featuring the consequent of
physical act
and
fact,
which are usually independent of SoCs.
Yīnwèi
is neutral in general, with a slight preference to
volitional content
and
epistemic
relations, to the consequent of
fact
, and to
speaker SoC.
Only one interaction with discourse style is found: in relations introduced by
yīnwèi,
the linguistic realization of the SoC varies across corpora: significantly more
implicit
yet few
explicit
cases in microblogs, yet the opposite is true in conversations. The specific profile of
yīnwèi
, depending on the ordering of the antecedent and the consequent, is robust across corpora. Furthermore, the relative importance of the associated subjectivity features is determined. In conclusion, the study contributes to our understanding of causal coherence and extends the
empirical database that supports the claims of a cognitive account of causal coherence relations. |
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ISSN: | 1606-822X 2309-5067 |
DOI: | 10.1075/lali.00080.xia |