Affiliation:
1. West Chester University
2. Nanyang Technological University
3. Leibniz-Institute for the German Language
4. Chung-Ang University
5. Georgetown University
6. Nagoya University
Abstract
AbstractThis paper examines multi-unit turns that allow speakers to retrospectively close the prior sequence while prospectively launching a new sequence, whichSchegloff (1986)referred to as interlocking organization. Using English telephone conversations as data, we focus on how multi-unit turns are used for topic shifts, and show that interlocking organization operates in conjunction with other phonetic and lexical features, such as increased pitch and overt markers of disjunction (e.g., “listen”). In addition, speakers utilize an audible inbreath that is placed between the first and the second units as a central interactional resource to project further talk, thereby suppressing speaker transition and possibly highlighting the action delivered in the second unit as being distinctly new. We propose that interlocking multi-unit turns, when used to make topically disjunctive moves, promote progressivity by avoiding a possible lapse in turn transition.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics