An Introduction to Applied Linguistics
Download 1.71 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Norbert Schmitt (ed.) - An Introduction to Applied Linguistics (2010, Routledge) - libgen.li
Speaker 1: Got on better with Glynbob I think and John Bish let me and Trudie sleep in
his bed last time we went up to Brunel or the one time when we stayed in Old Windsor with them cos erm Ben had given us his room cos he’d gone away for the weekend and erm it was me and Trudie just in Ben’s room and John Doughty had a double bed so he, John Bish had a double bed so he offered us this double bed between us and then slept in Ben’s room cos Ben and PQ had gone away for the weekend. (Hughes and McCarthy, 1998: 270) Hughes and McCarthy (1998) note that the italicized past perfects seem to give a reason or justification for the main events. In a similar vein, Celce-Murcia (1998) argues that the vast majority of grammatical choices that writers make represent 24 An Introduction to Applied Linguistics ‘rules’ that are discourse-sensitive, including position of adverbials, passive versus active voice, indirect object and direct object, sequencing, pronominalization across independent clauses, article/determiner selection, use of existential there and tense–aspect–modality choice. The order of adverbial clauses viz-a-viz main clauses in sentences, for instance, is not simply random. Rather, it has been found that sentence-initial adverbial clauses serve an important discourse-organizing role by linking up information in the main clause with information in the previous discourse; sentence-final clauses, in contrast, generally only expand the local main clause (Thompson, 1985; DeCarrico, 2000). The following example, from DeCarrico (2000), illustrates this point. It is an excerpt from a description of the painter Winslow Homer. Thoreau had called the seacoast a ‘wild rank place ... with no flattery in it.’ Homer, in his later years, consciously cultivated a briney persona that matched [the seacoast] roughness. When he was not communing with the roaring sea from his studio, on Prout’s Neck, Maine, he was off in the Adirondacks with his brother, Charles, angling for trout. (DeCarrico, 2000: 194) The first sentence establishes, as the discourse topic, the ruggedness of the seacoast and Homer’s deliberate cultivation of a rugged persona to match. DeCarrico (2000) notes that, given this context, the initial placement of the when adverbial clause not only functions within the sentence to indicate a time relation between the events within the two clauses themselves, but it also serves as a discourse link between the previously established topic, that of the wild seacoast and the pursuit of a briney persona, and the idea of being off in the Adirondacks angling for trout. If normal word order had been used, with the adverbial clause in final position, the linkage with the previous discourse would be much less clear, if not entirely lost. Spoken and Written Grammar Corpus studies also reveal important distinctions between spoken and written grammar. Comparisons of spoken and written corpora have raised some basic questions concerning descriptions of grammar, such as how different types of spoken language can be classified, how features of written and spoken grammar are differently distributed and what the status of the spoken language is, as an object of study within applied linguistics (McCarthy 1998). Carter and McCarthy (1995) believe that the differences between spoken and written grammar are especially important for pedagogical grammars, since ‘descriptions that rest on the written mode or on restricted genres and registers of spoken language are likely to omit many common features of everyday informal grammar and usage’ (Carter and McCarthy, 1995: 154). For instance, grammars these authors surveyed gave examples of the reporting verb in the simple past tense (X said that Y), and yet in their spoken corpus they found various examples of the reporting verb in past continuous (X was saying Y). While undoubtedly such observations are valid, Leech (2000) contends that the same grammatical repertoires operate in both speech and writing, although the structures used in each may occur with different frequencies. It should also be noted that there has often been a ‘written bias’ in linguistic descriptions (Linell, 2005). 25 Grammar Limitations of Grammatical Descriptions Previous sections have reviewed issues in describing grammar, issues that were mainly concerned with what to describe, how to describe it and how to account for differing approaches and their implications in terms of theory and pedagogy in applied linguistics. But however precise and thorough researchers may attempt to be in addressing these issues, there are certain limitations to descriptions of grammar given in isolation from all other parts of the language system. The Interdependence of Grammar and Lexis Regardless of the type of description or the approach taken, when we try to make general statements about grammar that neatly identify broad patterns, we are abstracting away from the overall system in ways that are somewhat artificial. One reason is that it is very difficult to isolate grammar and lexis into completely separate categories, because grammar does not exist on its own. It is interdependent with lexis and, in many cases, grammatical regularity and acceptability are conditioned by words. A commonly cited example is the past morpheme -ed, which applies only where the verb happens to be ‘regular’, as in walked, traded, wondered. Irregular verbs, on the other hand, take various past forms, such as drank or ate. However, the choice of lexical item may restrict grammatical structures in other ways. The progressive aspect, for instance, is often used to indicate a temporary activity, but certain lexical items may act upon the grammar to constrain this sense of temporariness. We easily recognize that a sentence such as Mary is taking a nap indicates a temporary activity, whereas Mary is taking a class indicates an activity of extended duration. Lexicogrammar: The Problem of Defining Boundaries A more striking instance of the interdependence of lexis and grammar is that of prefabricated ‘chunks’ of language, in which the boundary between the two becomes even more blurred. Native speakers tend to use a great many expressions that are formulaic in nature (Pawley and Syder, 1983), fixed or semi-fixed expressions that act as single lexical units used as wholes. That is, they are not composed each time from scratch by the rules of syntax. As fixed units, they appear to be intermediary between lexical words and grammatical structures. These prefabricated units are called by many names, perhaps most commonly ‘formulaic sequences’ (Wray, 2002), and exhibit great variability. Nattinger and DeCarrico (1992) were among the first to highlight the importance of these sequences, focusing in particular on ‘lexical phrases’, which they describe as ‘multi-word lexical phenomena that exist somewhere between the traditional poles of lexicon and syntax, conventionalized form/function composites that occur more frequently and have more idiomatically determined meaning than language that is put together each time’ (page 1). As form/function composites, lexical phrases differ from other formulaic language, such as idioms (kick the Download 1.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling