1. Introduction; 2. Toward an interfield approach to the study of spontaneous speech; 3. A dualistic approach to grammar: Microgrammar and macrogrammar; 4. Linearization and macrogrammatical fields; 5. Macrogrammar and the linearization of structural segments; 6. Neurolinguistic evidence for the Grammatical Dualism Assumption; 7. Conclusions.
This book takes the reader on a journey through the structure of everyday spoken English, providing a fresh look at the relation between language and the mind.
Alexander Haselow is Assistant Professor of English linguistics at the University of Rostock, Germany. His current research focuses on the cognitive, dialogic and neural mechanisms underlying the production and perception of speech in real time. He is the author of Typological Changes in the Lexicon – Analytic Tendencies in English Noun Formation (2011) and co-editor of Final Particles (2015).
'… this book represents an illuminating interdisciplinary study
that broadens the perspective of linguistic analysis by considering
not only the context of an individual interaction, but also the
cognitive mechanisms that give rise to the emergent grammar of
spontaneous speech. Without doubt, this book can be used as a good
reference book for students and researchers who are interested in
interactional linguistics and cognitive linguistics.' Haiping Wu,
Journal of Pragmatics
'This monograph evidently carries massive implications for research
into grammar and linguistic structure since it broadens the notion
of grammar and provides an alternative approach to it, enabling
researchers to investigate the emergent grammar of speech from an
integrated perspective, differing from the monolithic, 'fixed-code'
and sentence based approach to language and grammar through which
grammar has been described and analysed. The book is also of
immense significance to academics in discourse studies, a field
where spontaneous spoken language data have become the mainstream
research objects.' Baicheng Zhang, Discourse Studies
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