Expansion-relevant final but for preference organisation
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Published:2020-08-19
Issue:2
Volume:12
Page:295-321
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ISSN:1877-3095
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Container-title:International Review of Pragmatics
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language:
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Short-container-title:Int. Rev. Pragmat.
Affiliation:
1. 1 Tokyo City University Japan Tokyo
Abstract
Abstract
This article focuses on the utilisation of but in English at turn-final placement regarding provisions for what follows next, where the token is not a display of a traditional sense of content-level contrasts. The production of final buts in this article is a point of expansion relevance and emergent as a means of intersubjectively creating another opportunity space to deal with the ongoing disaffiliation or lack of resources. My observations particularly unpack the contextual properties of final buts. First, a but-turn is designed not strictly to show a partial agreement and back down from the original statement. It can be more plausibly argued that the but-turn indicates which resource of interaction is (or is not) requested at that specific moment to accomplish the ongoing agenda. Second, a projected action of reworking can be formulated in collaborative completion with a co-participant explicating the account to the but-turn.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Psychology (miscellaneous),Communication,Language and Linguistics