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Language Arts & Disciplines, Linguistics
Spontaneous Spoken Language: Syntax and Discourse by Jim Miller β€” book cover

Spontaneous Spoken Language: Syntax and Discourse

by Jim Miller, Regina Weinert
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Synopsis

Jim Miller and Regina Weinert investigate syntactic structure and the organization of discourse in spontaneous spoken language. Using data from English, German, and Russian, they develop a systematic analysis of spoken English and highlight properties that hold across languages.
The authors argue that the differences in syntax and the construction of discourse between spontaneous speech and written language bear on various areas of linguistic theory, apart from having obvious implications for syntactic analysis. In particular, they bear on typology, Chomskyan theories of first language acquisition, and the perennial problem of language in education. In current typological practice written and spontaneous spoken texts are often compared; the authors show convincingly that typological research should compare like with like. The consequences for Chomskyan, and indeed all, theories of first language acquisition flow from the central fact that children first learn spoken language before they are taught written language.

About the Author, Jim Miller

Jim Miller is Professor of Cognitive Linguistics, the University of Auckland.
Regina Weinert is a Lecturer in Germanic Linguistics, the University of Sheffield

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Book Details

Published
June 1, 2009
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780199561254

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