Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic Pronouns

This paper is about two competing marking strategies for contrastive topics in a topic shift context in French: emphatic pronouns and contrastive adverbs. We analyse the choice between these markers in one specific syntactic position, i.e. when they occur between the subject and the finite verb, in...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jorina Brysbaert, Karen Lahousse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Caen 2022-12-01
Series:Discours
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/discours/12189
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832581862101352448
author Jorina Brysbaert
Karen Lahousse
author_facet Jorina Brysbaert
Karen Lahousse
author_sort Jorina Brysbaert
collection DOAJ
description This paper is about two competing marking strategies for contrastive topics in a topic shift context in French: emphatic pronouns and contrastive adverbs. We analyse the choice between these markers in one specific syntactic position, i.e. when they occur between the subject and the finite verb, in different corpora consisting of formal written, informal written and spoken French. Our results indicate that the frequency of emphatic pronouns and contrastive adverbs is register-dependent. Emphatic pronouns appear more often between the subject and the finite verb in the informal written and spoken corpora, whereas contrastive adverbs occur more frequently in this position in the formal newspaper corpora. Moreover, we show that the use of emphatic pronouns is affected by pragmatic constraints, which is not the case for contrastive adverbs: emphatic pronouns typically modify subjects with a clearly identifiable – preferably human – referent. Hence, in a more general way, this study provides evidence for the idea that both language-internal and language-external factors should be taken into account when analysing the “free” choice between two similar linguistic marking strategies.
format Article
id doaj-art-ac5397c0b0e34aee99639bcd3866af10
institution Kabale University
issn 1963-1723
language English
publishDate 2022-12-01
publisher Presses universitaires de Caen
record_format Article
series Discours
spelling doaj-art-ac5397c0b0e34aee99639bcd3866af102025-01-30T09:53:14ZengPresses universitaires de CaenDiscours1963-17232022-12-013110.4000/discours.12189Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic PronounsJorina BrysbaertKaren LahousseThis paper is about two competing marking strategies for contrastive topics in a topic shift context in French: emphatic pronouns and contrastive adverbs. We analyse the choice between these markers in one specific syntactic position, i.e. when they occur between the subject and the finite verb, in different corpora consisting of formal written, informal written and spoken French. Our results indicate that the frequency of emphatic pronouns and contrastive adverbs is register-dependent. Emphatic pronouns appear more often between the subject and the finite verb in the informal written and spoken corpora, whereas contrastive adverbs occur more frequently in this position in the formal newspaper corpora. Moreover, we show that the use of emphatic pronouns is affected by pragmatic constraints, which is not the case for contrastive adverbs: emphatic pronouns typically modify subjects with a clearly identifiable – preferably human – referent. Hence, in a more general way, this study provides evidence for the idea that both language-internal and language-external factors should be taken into account when analysing the “free” choice between two similar linguistic marking strategies.https://journals.openedition.org/discours/12189diaphasic variationcontrastive topictopic shiftcontrastive adverbemphatic pronouncorpus analysis
spellingShingle Jorina Brysbaert
Karen Lahousse
Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic Pronouns
Discours
diaphasic variation
contrastive topic
topic shift
contrastive adverb
emphatic pronoun
corpus analysis
title Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic Pronouns
title_full Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic Pronouns
title_fullStr Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic Pronouns
title_full_unstemmed Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic Pronouns
title_short Marking Contrastive Topics in a Topic Shift Context: Contrastive Adverbs versus Emphatic Pronouns
title_sort marking contrastive topics in a topic shift context contrastive adverbs versus emphatic pronouns
topic diaphasic variation
contrastive topic
topic shift
contrastive adverb
emphatic pronoun
corpus analysis
url https://journals.openedition.org/discours/12189
work_keys_str_mv AT jorinabrysbaert markingcontrastivetopicsinatopicshiftcontextcontrastiveadverbsversusemphaticpronouns
AT karenlahousse markingcontrastivetopicsinatopicshiftcontextcontrastiveadverbsversusemphaticpronouns