Discourse Features of Ten Languages of West-Central Africa
Availability:
Not Available Online
Statement of Responsibility:
Levinsohn, Stephen H., editor
Editors:
Series Issue:
119
Issue Date:
1994
Extent:
ix, 241 pages
Publication Status:
Published
Table of Contents:
Preface Stephen H. Levinsohn
Section One: Cohesion and Discontinuities
- Discontinuities in Coherent Texts Stephen H. Levinsohn
- Cohesion and Discontinuities in N maand Expository Discourse Patricia L. Wilkendorf
- Preposed Constituents and Discontinuities in Makaa Discourse Daniel P. Heath and Teresa A. Heath
Section Two: Participant Reference Encoding
- Demonstrative Adjectives in Mofu-Gudur Folktales James N. Pohlig and Stephen H. Levinsohn
- Participant Reference in N maand Narrative Discourse Carolyn P. Taylor
- Field Procedures for the Analysis of Participant Reference in a Monologue Discourse Stephen H. Levinsohn
Section Three: Semantic Constraints on Relevance and Prominence Devices
- Semantic Constraints on Relevance in Lobala Discourse David Morgan
- Thematic Development and Prominence in Tyap Discourse Carl M Follingstad
- Prominence in Bafut: Syntactic and Pragmatic Devices Joseph Ngwa Mfonyam
- Further Thoughts on Four Discourse Particles in Mandara Annie Whaley Pohlig and James N. Pohlig
- Notes on Markers of Parallelism in Meta by Klaus W. Spreda
- Rheme and Focus in Mambila Mona J. Perrin
Country:
Content Language:
Field:
Work Type:
Nature of Work:
Part of Series:
Summer Institute of Linguistics and the University of Texas at Arlington Publications in Linguistics 119
Has Parts:
Entry Number:
8779