Week 5 conversation + turn taking Flashcards
primacy of conversation
Conversation provides the context in which most native languages are
learned
• Conversations are highly structured — they have a grammar
(convo = one type of speech event)
What must a conversation achieve?
RULES:
- Turn taking, orderly
- interlocutors expect what happens next : if choice, how to decide
- way to repair malfunctions/errors if occur
TURN TAKING
participants typically agree on who should speak when and when a
turn is over but this is not negotiated explicitly …
pause/competition/interupption
Pause and competition
overlong pause: resolved by repitition of utterance/other means
turn taking conflict resolved:
- one speaker relinquish floor
- a speaker may turn up volume n keep speaking
Tolerances for pause and overlaps
- turn taking conventions serve to minimise these problems
- culturally/linguistically bound toleranve
Turn Taking signal types
- INTONATIONAL CUES
- TAG-QUESTIONS (isnt it? after statement)
- OTHER DISCOURSE PARTICLES “you know”“or something”
- SIGNIFICANT PAUSES
non verbal:
GESTURE - when your hands stop moving and return to a rest
position it’s the next person’s turn to talk
EYE-GAZE - in Australia it is often the case that when the speaker
returns their gaze to yours it is now your turn to speak
ADJACENCY PAIRS
- where conversations organised in terms of EXPECTED SEQUENCES
- QUESTION + ANSWER
- INV + ACCEPTANCE /REFUSal
- ASSESSMENT + DISAGREEMENT
- REQUEST + GRANTING
- APOLOGY + ACCEPTANCE
- SUMMONS + ACKNOWLEDGE MENT
7a. COMPLIMENT + ACCEPTANCE
7b. COMPLIMENT + DEFLECTION
7c. COMPLIMENT + REJECTION
Structure of Adjacency pairs
- parts CONTIGUOUS (+uttered by diff speakers)
> A. Where’s the cheese I bought this morning?
B. They said on the radio that it isn’t going to rain for at least
another week. The cat got it.
(except embedding) - parts ORDERED (eg. q preceeds a)
> A. Yes, I’d love to come to your party!
B. Would you like to come over on Saturday? - parts MATCHED
> A. Do you want some more coffee?
B. That’s okay, you’re not bothering me in the least.
Embedding adjacency pairs
CONTIGUOUS can b violated
A. Can I speak to Professor Smith?
*B. May I ask who’s calling?
*A. Joe Bloggs
B. Please hold
preferred + dispreferred responses
A. Would you like to see a movie this week?
B. Yes that would be fun. [positive]
*B. Well, mmm, I’m a bit busy this week. I have this linguistics assignment
due, and I need to wash the dog, and I really ought to defrost the
fridge … [negative]
socially recognised opening sequences for conversations
o Formulaic greetings (+ phone greetings/etiquette)
o Apologising for interrupting
o Attracting attention
o Making one’s identity known to the other person
Closing sequences
- careful negotiation
- usually not
- anything else to say? o “Okay …”, “Well …”, “Alright then …” PRE-CLOSING turns SLOW CONVO
- Following a pre-closing sequence a speaker may reintroduce the initial topic
“Okay, well I was just calling to wish you a Happy Birthday …” - Finally, the conversation closes with a parting expression:
“Goodbye”, “See ya”, “Bye for now”, “A bientôt”, “Wiyalarta”