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E-grāmata: Sociopragmatics of Attitude Datives in Levantine Arabic

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jan-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Edinburgh University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781474434089
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jan-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Edinburgh University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781474434089
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Examines the social functions of attitude dative pronouns in four Arabic dialects

Analysing data from a variety of sources, including soap operas, movies, plays, talk shows and other audiovisual material, this book examines attitude datives - pragmatic markers that deal with interpersonal attitudes and relations - in Levantine Arabic. It examines four types of attitude dative in context to deepen our understanding of the interaction between social dimensions and pragmatic markers. Using data from Syrian, Lebanese, Jordanian and Palestinian dialects it provides a valuable non-European perspective on language use.

Documents the phenomenon of attitude datives in four Levantine Arabic dialects
Utilises data from a variety of sources including soap operas, movies, plays, talk shows
Examines four types of attitude datives: topic/affectee-oriented, speaker-oriented, hearer-oriented, and subject-oriented
Analyses the evaluative and relational functions of attitude datives as interpersonal pragmatic markers in their social contexts
Preface vii
Abbreviations and Other Notes ix
1 Introduction
1(22)
1 Putting things in perspective
1(2)
2 Attitude dative constructions: an overview
3(11)
2.1 Topic/affectee-oriented ADs
4(4)
2.2 Speaker-oriented ADs
8(2)
2.3 Hearer-oriented ADs
10(2)
2.4 Subject-oriented ADs
12(2)
3 Purpose and significance
14(2)
4 Data sources
16(5)
5 A roadmap
21(2)
2 Attitude Datives in Social Context -- The Analytic Tools
23(30)
1 Introduction
23(5)
2 ADCs and context
28(5)
2.1 The sociocultural context
29(1)
2.2 The situational context
29(2)
2.3 The co-textual context
31(1)
2.4 ADs in context
32(1)
3 ADs and evaluation
33(4)
4 ADCs and the stancetaking stage model
37(9)
4.1 Theory of stance
37(2)
4.2 The stage model
39(5)
4.3 ADCs in the stancetaking stage model
44(2)
5 Putting it all together
46(5)
6 Conclusion
51(2)
3 Speaker-Oriented Attitude Datives in Social Context
53(45)
1 Introduction
53(4)
2 SP-ADCs as directives
57(28)
2.1 SP-AD directives and hierarchical authority
58(20)
2.2 SP-AD directives and reciprocal authority
78(5)
2.3 SP-AD directives and knowledge authority
83(2)
3 SP-ADCs as representatives
85(11)
3.1 SP-AD representatives as second-person complaints
87(4)
3.2 SP-AD representatives as third-person complaints
91(5)
4 Conclusion
96(2)
4 Hearer-Oriented Attitude Datives in Social Context
98(33)
1 Introduction
98(2)
2 HR-ADs, attention grabbing, and hearer engagement
100(2)
3 HR-ADCs as commissives: recognizing the hearer as an authority
102(7)
4 HR-ADCs as representatives
109(20)
4.1 HR-AD representatives as first-person bragging
109(4)
4.2 HR-AD representatives as third-person praise and criticism
113(16)
5 Conclusion
129(2)
5 Subject-Oriented Attitude Datives in Social Context
131(25)
1 Introduction
131(2)
2 SUBJ-ADCs as representatives
133(11)
2.1 SUBJ-AD representatives about insignificant events
133(7)
2.2 SUBJ-ADCs about surprising events
140(4)
3 SUBJ-ADCs as directives
144(11)
3.1 SUBJ-AD directives as requests
144(4)
3.2 SUBJ-ADCs as suggestions
148(5)
3.3 SUBJ-ADCs as challenges
153(2)
4 Conclusion
155(1)
6 Final Remarks
156(2)
Bibliography 158(9)
Index 167