Affiliation:
1. The Ohio State University
2. University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Abstract
Abstract
This study examines discourse functions of Korean ‘yes’ words from an interactional perspective based on
naturally-occurring conversation data. Tokens of yey, ney, ey, ung, um, and e in Korean are
widely recognized as affirmative responses. A close examination of these tokens, however, reveals wide-ranging interactional
functions through which speakers express active engagement, share information, negotiate meaning, and maintain discourse
coherence. The present study identifies a total of fifteen discourse-pragmatic functions of Korean ‘yes’ words: (1) affirmative
answer, (2) confirmation, (3) acceptance, (4) agreement, (5) answer to summons, (6) acknowledgement, (7) change-of-state, (8)
change-of-activity, (9) response solicitation, (10) reinforcement, (11) other initiation of repair, (12) closing of phone call,
(13) continuer, (14) proposal to discontinue the on-going action for the sake of a larger course of action, and (15) arguably
hesitation marker. This study demonstrates that the interactional approach enables the discovery of varied discourse functions of
a type of linguistic items, which may not be readily available in dictionaries or grammar reference guides.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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