დისკურსის მარკერების გრამატიკულ-პრაგმატიკული ფუნქციების შეპირისპირებითი ანალიზი ინგლისურსა და ქართულ აკადემიურ დისკურსში

dc.contributor.authorბუსკივაძე, ხატია
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-12T08:57:46Z
dc.date.available2022-01-12T08:57:46Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.descriptionკონფერენცია ეძღვნება ჭაბუა ამირეჯიბის დაბადებიდან 100 წლის იუბილეს/ The Conference is Dedicated to the 100th Anniversary of Chabua Amirejibien_US
dc.description.abstractThis paper investigates the use of discourse markers in two commencement speeches given by American and Georgian speakers from the perspective of Pragmatics. The study is specifically based on Fraser’s taxonomy of discourse markers according to their pragmatic and metalinguistic functions. This theoretical framework is concerned with language in use, giving more importance to the context than to the text of utterances. The article discusses: (1) DMs (discourse markers) used in this specific discourse; (2) provides a thorough analysis of the addresser’s communicative intentions based on their choice of DMs (discourse markers); (3) identifies main functional (and linguistic) characteristics of English DMs in comparison to their selected Georgian compatible equivalents. The empirical study (the case of two randomly chosen speeches of American and Georgian speakers) revealed the similarity of the syntactic and linguistic characteristics of the DMs in both languages. They could be presented by Fraser’s contrastive discourse markers syntactic patterns S1, DM+S2, S1.DM+S2. DMs have only the procedural meaning and they do not invest in the semantic meanings of the utterances that host them. The grammar-pragmatic analysis of chosen discourse markers revealed the variety of relations between the segments of the discourse. DMs but/ [magram], and/ [da], so/ [ase rom] present diff erent pragmatic categories – contrastive, elaborative and inferential types of DMs and they imply diff erent variety of pragmatic functions/sub-functions: But/ [magram] – direct contrast, indirect contrast, violation of expectation, indirect violation of expectation, correction, qualification, opener, topic/focus changer. And/ [da] – focus marker, adding more details to the provided information, elaborative marker between discourse segments, gap/pause filler. So/ [ase rom] – result and consequence marker, main idea marker, summarizing/ rewording/ giving an example, boundary marker, question or request marker.en_US
dc.identifier.citationსაერთაშორისო სამეცნიერო კონფერენცია: 1921 წლის ისტორიულ-კულტურული მოვლენები: ხედვა საუკუნის შემდეგ, თეზისები, 2021, გვ. 16-18/ International Scientific Conference: HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL EVENTS OF 1921: THE VISION A CENTURY LATER, Theses, 2021, pp.: 16-18en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.tsu.ge/handle/123456789/1026
dc.language.isogeen_US
dc.subjectინგლისური ენაen_US
dc.subjectქართული ენაen_US
dc.subjectდისკურსიen_US
dc.subjectEnglishen_US
dc.subjectGeorgianen_US
dc.subjectdiscourseen_US
dc.titleდისკურსის მარკერების გრამატიკულ-პრაგმატიკული ფუნქციების შეპირისპირებითი ანალიზი ინგლისურსა და ქართულ აკადემიურ დისკურსშიen_US
dc.title.alternativeTHE COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF DISCOURSE MARKERS GRAMMATICAL-PRAGMATIC FUNCTIONS IN ENGLISH AND GEORGIAN COMMENCEMENT SPEECHES (THE CASE OF BUT, AND, SO)en_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
1921 Tezisebi - DAK new_05.pdf
Size:
220.63 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.71 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description: