FS 2014

Jennifer Reinhard

Jennifer Reinhard

Set of flashcards Details

Flashcards 78
Language English
Category English
Level University
Created / Updated 27.04.2014 / 22.09.2016
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Presentation: typically objective (Grammatical features)?

  • mostly major declarative sentences
  • full subordination, parallel structures
  • (no comments by author)
  • unmarked structures
  • standard punctuation

Presentation: typically objective (Exophoric references)?

  • explicit references
  • specifics and details provided
  • intertextual references with documentation
  • few cultural assumptions

Presentation: typically objective (Styles)?

  • illustrative
  • technical

Styles: common to all varieties of texts?

  • neutral: neutral vocabulary, unmarked sentence structure
  • formal: precise, classical vocab, passives and/or impersonal, careful punctuation
  • informal: phrasal verbs, idioms, lack of parallelism, ellipsis, minor sentences
  • comparative: marked by like, similar to, as...as, than, different from, comparative Aj and Av

Styles: typical of subjective texts?

  • appreciatory: pleasant, better than reality
  • depreciatory: unpleasant, worse than reality
  • evocative: elicits emotional response or stimulates sensation
  • hyperbolic: overstatement, exaggeration
  • ironical: contradictory, ridicule, humorous
  • impolite: lack of respect, rude, bad manners, slang, swearwords
  • polite: respect, honorifics, titles, please and thank you
  • metaphorical: indirect comparison from different field
  • persuasive: stance Adverbials, rhetorical questions, etc

can reflect the writer's reactions and attitudes

Styles: typical objective texts?

  • illustrative: marked as an example (with e.g., for example, such as, i.e.), photographs, figures, charts
  • technical: specialized terminology, numbers, abbreviations, particular layouts

reflect the writer's respect for the reader and focus on concepts

Cohesion: non-lexical ties?

  • deixis
  • ellipsis
  • coordinate and subordinate conjunction
  • repeated structures in non-coordinate structures
  • listing structures
  • parallelism in lists
  • sequence forms 
  • predictive devices
  • formatting devices

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: deixis?

anaphoric, cataphoric, exophoric

- pronouns (he, she, it, they)

- definite, demonstrative, and possessive determiners (the, this/that/these/those, their)

- non-definite adverbs of place and time (here, there, then, before, now)

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: ellipsis?

ommission of redundant elements

- pro-forms: do, so, too

- implicit repetition

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: coordinate and subordinate conjunction?

- coordinate structures: and, or, but, linking heads of phrases, main verbs, phrases, SCls, MCls

- subordinate markers: so, yet, although, while, etc.

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: repeated structures in non-coordinate structures?

- repetition at the phonetic level such as alliteration or rhyme

- similar types of subject: e.g. same pronoun, all simple NPs, light, heavy, delayed

- form of verb phrase: e.g. most in the simple past, present progressive, etc

- types of post-modifiers: e.g. numerous post-modifying PPs or RCls

- fronted adverbials: e.g. time in 2009, that summer, before...

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: listing structures?

- additive: moreover, in addition, as well, etc

- alphabetic: a, b, c,...

- enumerative: 1, 2, 3, ...

- bullet points, lists with punctuation: colons, semi-colons, commas

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: listing structures?

- additive: moreover, in addition, as well, etc

- alphabetic: a, b, c,...

- enumerative: 1, 2, 3, ...

- bullet points, lists with punctuation: colons, semi-colons, commas

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: listing structures?

- additive: moreover, in addition, as well, etc

- alphabetic: a, b, c,...

- enumerative: 1, 2, 3, ...

- bullet points, lists with punctuation: colons, semi-colons, commas

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: parallelism in lists

 

e.g. repeated verbs froms, noun phrases

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: sequence forms?

- initators: a/am, plural Ns, Once upon a time...

- terminators: conjunct Adverbials, And they lived...

- sequence signals: adjunct and conjunct Adverbials

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: predicitve devices?

reporting, recapitulation, question, etc

- reference to an upcoming list: e.g. three problems must be discussed in this context.

- questions: e.g. what are the problems with the present policy?

- recapitulation: e.g. In summary...

Cohesion - non-lexical ties: formatting devices?

e.g. underlineitalicsbold, white spaces between paragraphs

Coherence?

- context

  • current world and local events
  • culture, country, audience, distribution

- extralinguistic world knowledge

- intra- and intertextuality

  • reference to same or other texts (intra: same / inter: other)

- logical organization and structure

  • introduction, body, end-unit/closing
  • moves within the text

Structuring patterns in text: Normal text structuring?

- markers for beginning, middle and end

- linear progression

- logical development

- predictive devices

- pro-forms after referents (anaphoric deixis)

- typical of non-fiction/objective texts

Structuring patterns in text: Expressive text structuring?

- lack of or repetition of markers for beginning, middle and end

- element of tension

- unexpected elements

- pro-forms before referents (cataphoric deixis)

- common in fiction and other subjective texts 

Structuring patterns in text: Primary text structuring?

- temporal (typical of narration)

  • logical sequences as a secondary structuring on expository and argumentation

- spatial (typical of description)

  • often combined with temporal sequences in narration

- analytical (typical of exposition)

  • secondary structuring in argumentation and instruction

- deductive (typical of argumentation)

  • secondary structuring in exposition

- listing (typical of instruction)

  • secondary structuring in exposition and argumentation

Structuring patterns in text: Secondary text structuring?

- climactic / anticlimactic (leading up to a point): common in narration, description and argumentation

- general-to-particular / particular-to-general: common in exposition and argumentation

- cause-to-effect / effect-to-cause: common in narration, exposition and argumentation

Coherence: Macro-propositions?

- coherence at the global level

- overall unity of a discourse sequence

- global meaning of a passage

- meanings assigned to text in processes of interpretation and the meanings derived from the local meaning of words and sentences

- in addition to the meanings of words and sentences, world knowledge (extralinguistic knowl.) affects the reader's ability to understand a piece of text as a coherent whole

Coherence: Constructing meaning from texts?

- procedural knowledge (knowing how)

- declarative knowledge (knowing what)

  • linguistic knowledge: pre-existing knowledge about the language, co-textual knowledge gained from text, social knowledge (genre, text type, etc)
  • extralinguistic knowledge: pre-existing knowledge about various domains, knowledge acquired from the text

Coherence - Argumentation: Claim?

the statement being argued (a thesis)

also: thesis statement, opinion, assertion, premise, proposition

Coherence - Argumentation: Grounds?

the data, facts or evidence to prove the argument

also: reasons, evidence, supporting points, examples, citations/expert's opinions

Coherence - Argumentation: Warrant?

the general, often implicit, statements that serve as bridges between the claim and the data

Coherence - Argumentation: Backing?

implicit assumptions that support the warrants by answering different questions

Coherence - Argumentation: Qualifier?

statements that limit the strength of the argument or statements that propose the conditions under which the argument is true

Coherence - Argumentation: Rebuttals?

counter-arguments and their answers or statements indicating circumstances when the general argument does not hold true

Coherence: Schemata?

- discussed by Kant

- background knowledge used to make sense of experience

- set of concepts co-activated depending on the context

- "global patterns of events and states in ordered sequences linked by time proximity and casuality." (B&D)

Coherence: Frames?

- proposed by Minsky to represent fixed structures of knowledge (stereotypical situations)

- allows coherence to be imposed on incoming info

- packets of info similar to a film frame

- exemplify typical instances or cases

- inherit default assumptions that can be displaced when more specific info is available

- global patterns containing commonsense knowledge about central concepts (e.g. birthday parties)

Coherence: Scripts?

- predict behavior in specific situations/frames

- frame-like structures representing sequences of expected actions or events (similar to a film)

- established plans called up fequently to specify the roles of participants and their expected actions

- allow us to fill in or infer scenes or actions that are not explicitly mentioned

Clarity: Layout and design features?

- titles and headings

- white space

- numerical and alphabetical lists

- typeface, including:

  • font size
  • font type
  • font features

- margins, indenting, white space between paragraphs

- tables and visuals (charts, illustrations, photographs)

- color, columns, frames, symbols (arrows etc)

Clarity: Organization?

  • layout and design features (appearance)
  • headings at different levels
  • recognizable without reading the text
  • traditional and/or expected characteristics
  • agreed upon by discourse community
  • economical or unambiguous communication
  • genre-specific conventions

Clarity: Headings?

  • titles of books, articles, texts
  • chapters, sections, paragraphs
  • closed class words excluded if possible
  • elliptic structures ("telegraph style")
  • special typeface/fonts/effects
  • spacing (center, right-justified, white space)
  • conventions specific to genre and/or publisher

Clarity: Signposts / linguistic features?

  • lists and parallelism
  • predictive devices
  • reading path / organization / logical development
  • pronoun and determiner deixis
  • explicit indicators of syntactic relations (cj, A)
  • distinction between original text, direct speech and reported speech
  • inter- and intra-textual references