Using novel examples from live, unscripted radio/TV broadcasts and the internet, this path-breaking book will force us to reconsider the nature of everyday English and its complex interplay of syntactic, pragmatic, sociolinguistic and psycholinguistic factors. Uncovering unusual types of non-standard relative clauses, Andrew Radford develops theoretically sophisticated analyses in an area that has traditionally hardly been touched on: that of nonstandard (yet not clearly dialectal) variation in English. Making sense of a huge amount of data, the book demonstrates that some types of non-standard relative clauses have a complex syntactic structure of their own in which the relation between the relative clause and its antecedent is either syntactically encoded or pragmatic in nature, while others come about as a result of hypercorrection, and yet others arise from processing errors.
ISBN: | 9781108492805 |
Publication date: | 20th June 2019 |
Author: | Andrew University of Essex Radford |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 324 pages |
Series: | Cambridge Studies in Linguistics |
Genres: |
Grammar, syntax and morphology Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics Language: history and general works |