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Swearing, Discourse and Function in Conversational British English

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Swearing, Discourse and Function in Conversational British English. / McEnery, Anthony; Brookes, Gavin; Hanks, Elizabeth et al.
In: Journal of Pragmatics, Vol. 213, 31.08.2023, p. 36-48.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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McEnery A, Brookes G, Hanks E, Gerigk K, Egbert J. Swearing, Discourse and Function in Conversational British English. Journal of Pragmatics. 2023 Aug 31;213:36-48. Epub 2023 Jun 12. doi: 10.1016/j.pragma.2023.05.017

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McEnery, Anthony ; Brookes, Gavin ; Hanks, Elizabeth et al. / Swearing, Discourse and Function in Conversational British English. In: Journal of Pragmatics. 2023 ; Vol. 213. pp. 36-48.

Bibtex

@article{bccf83d719b045ed831be2574a677130,
title = "Swearing, Discourse and Function in Conversational British English",
abstract = "In this paper we look at the role that macrostructures in discourse have to play in the study of swearing. While studied in isolation, such macrostructures have not yet been studied comprehensively and the range of macrostructures studied has been small. By contrast, work on microstructures is much better developed. In response to this, using spoken corpus data from the BNC2014, we take two approaches to studying discourse in this paper. In the first approach, we explore spoken data which has been annotated with a functional discourse coding scheme that shows, across the corpus, the distribution of a set of macrostructures, discourse units, that generally characterise conversation. Our goal is to see how swearing distributes according to discourse unit function and to account for any observations made. Following from that, we explore a single macrostructure of discourse - narrative, including its sub-elements - to see whether swearing interacts with this macrostructure and its component parts. We conclude by arguing that discourse is an important dimension along which the use of swearing may vary, that such variation is likely to relate to emotion, and that the different perspectives on macrostructure taken in the paper are complementary.",
keywords = "Annotation, Discourse, Discourse units, Macrostructure, Narrative, Swearing",
author = "Anthony McEnery and Gavin Brookes and Elizabeth Hanks and Kevin Gerigk and Jesse Egbert",
year = "2023",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.pragma.2023.05.017",
language = "English",
volume = "213",
pages = "36--48",
journal = "Journal of Pragmatics",
issn = "0378-2166",
publisher = "ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Swearing, Discourse and Function in Conversational British English

AU - McEnery, Anthony

AU - Brookes, Gavin

AU - Hanks, Elizabeth

AU - Gerigk, Kevin

AU - Egbert, Jesse

PY - 2023/8/31

Y1 - 2023/8/31

N2 - In this paper we look at the role that macrostructures in discourse have to play in the study of swearing. While studied in isolation, such macrostructures have not yet been studied comprehensively and the range of macrostructures studied has been small. By contrast, work on microstructures is much better developed. In response to this, using spoken corpus data from the BNC2014, we take two approaches to studying discourse in this paper. In the first approach, we explore spoken data which has been annotated with a functional discourse coding scheme that shows, across the corpus, the distribution of a set of macrostructures, discourse units, that generally characterise conversation. Our goal is to see how swearing distributes according to discourse unit function and to account for any observations made. Following from that, we explore a single macrostructure of discourse - narrative, including its sub-elements - to see whether swearing interacts with this macrostructure and its component parts. We conclude by arguing that discourse is an important dimension along which the use of swearing may vary, that such variation is likely to relate to emotion, and that the different perspectives on macrostructure taken in the paper are complementary.

AB - In this paper we look at the role that macrostructures in discourse have to play in the study of swearing. While studied in isolation, such macrostructures have not yet been studied comprehensively and the range of macrostructures studied has been small. By contrast, work on microstructures is much better developed. In response to this, using spoken corpus data from the BNC2014, we take two approaches to studying discourse in this paper. In the first approach, we explore spoken data which has been annotated with a functional discourse coding scheme that shows, across the corpus, the distribution of a set of macrostructures, discourse units, that generally characterise conversation. Our goal is to see how swearing distributes according to discourse unit function and to account for any observations made. Following from that, we explore a single macrostructure of discourse - narrative, including its sub-elements - to see whether swearing interacts with this macrostructure and its component parts. We conclude by arguing that discourse is an important dimension along which the use of swearing may vary, that such variation is likely to relate to emotion, and that the different perspectives on macrostructure taken in the paper are complementary.

KW - Annotation

KW - Discourse

KW - Discourse units

KW - Macrostructure

KW - Narrative

KW - Swearing

U2 - 10.1016/j.pragma.2023.05.017

DO - 10.1016/j.pragma.2023.05.017

M3 - Journal article

VL - 213

SP - 36

EP - 48

JO - Journal of Pragmatics

JF - Journal of Pragmatics

SN - 0378-2166

ER -