Affiliation:
1. The University of Western Australia
Abstract
Abstract
Quotative be like has been described as “one of the most striking developments [in English]”
(Tagliamonte and D’Arcy 2004: 493). Despite the vast research on quotatives and the
upsurge of be like, the potential impact of discourse type on the grammar of quotation has rarely been assessed.
Yet, discourse type has proved a relevant factor in linguistic variation (see Travis
2007; Buchstaller 2011; Travis and
Lindstrom 2016). Drawing on vernacular spoken data from our multigenerational corpus of Australian English, we include
discourse type as a predictor in our recursive partitioning and logistic regression models. Our results show that similar
linguistic constraints operate on be like across discourse types. However, significant differences emerge
regarding its social conditioning in narrative as opposed to non-narrative discourse, pointing to a strong association between
be like and female storytelling.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
2 articles.
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