This conversation analysis study focuses on sequences where speakers make a piece of information explicit (explicitation sequences). Among others, formulations (Heritage & Watson 1979) and candidate inferences (turns submitting an inference and requiring a confirmation in a second position) can initiate an explicitation. Based on a short analysis of conversational data in French this study shows that, despite their similarities, formulations and candidate inferences have different impacts on the grounding processes in conversation (Clark & Brennan 1991). More generally, this paper is concerned with the questions of inference and information in the co-construction of meaning in interaction.
CITATION STYLE
Chernyshova, E. (2018). Explicitation sequences in conversation: some considerations on formulations, candidate inferences and grounding. Travaux Neuchâtelois de Linguistique, (68), 51–58. https://doi.org/10.26034/tranel.2018.2862
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