What do(es) you mean? The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish

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What do(es) you mean? The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish. / Jensen, Torben Juel; Gregersen, Frans.

In: Pragmatics, Vol. 26, No. 3, 01.09.2016, p. 417-446.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, TJ & Gregersen, F 2016, 'What do(es) you mean? The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish', Pragmatics, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 417-446. https://doi.org/10.1075/prag.26.3.04jen

APA

Jensen, T. J., & Gregersen, F. (2016). What do(es) you mean? The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish. Pragmatics, 26(3), 417-446. https://doi.org/10.1075/prag.26.3.04jen

Vancouver

Jensen TJ, Gregersen F. What do(es) you mean? The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish. Pragmatics. 2016 Sep 1;26(3):417-446. https://doi.org/10.1075/prag.26.3.04jen

Author

Jensen, Torben Juel ; Gregersen, Frans. / What do(es) you mean? The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish. In: Pragmatics. 2016 ; Vol. 26, No. 3. pp. 417-446.

Bibtex

@article{becc592778554a69af9c45d7dd625b43,
title = "What do(es) you mean?: The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish",
abstract = "In modern Danish, the most frequently used pronoun for generic reference is man, developed from the noun man(d) {\textquoteleft}man{\textquoteright}. Recently, though, the second person singular pronoun du has gained ground, in parallel to similar recent developments in other languages. A large-scale, longitudinal study of the LANCHART corpus of spoken Danish has documented a rise in the use of generic du in Copenhagen (and later in the rest of Denmark) during the period from the early 1970s, where generic du was practically non-existent, till the late 1980s where du comprised around 25% of all pronouns with generic meaning. However, recordings from the 2000s show that the use of du has peaked and is now decreasing or stabilizing at a lower level.This article focuses on intra-individual and intra-conversational variation within the LANCHART corpus with the aim of uncovering the pragmatic effect of using du instead of other generic pronouns. All passages in the recordings have been coded according to macro speech act, activity type, type of interaction and genre as well as enunciation. The results of a statistical analysis using mixed models show a number of correlations as to the use of generic du (in comparison with man), and by and large support the claim that generic du is used as a resource for construing involvement, arguably by exploiting the ambiguity of du between a generic and a specific second person meaning. These quantitative results make up the point of departure for corroborating qualitative analyses of the discourse framing of the use of generic pronouns.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, generic reference, pronouns, style, language variation and change, ambiguity",
author = "Jensen, {Torben Juel} and Frans Gregersen",
year = "2016",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1075/prag.26.3.04jen",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "417--446",
journal = "Pragmatics",
issn = "1018-2101",
publisher = "John Benjamins Publishing Company",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - What do(es) you mean?

T2 - The pragmatics of generic second person pronouns in modern spoken Danish

AU - Jensen, Torben Juel

AU - Gregersen, Frans

PY - 2016/9/1

Y1 - 2016/9/1

N2 - In modern Danish, the most frequently used pronoun for generic reference is man, developed from the noun man(d) ‘man’. Recently, though, the second person singular pronoun du has gained ground, in parallel to similar recent developments in other languages. A large-scale, longitudinal study of the LANCHART corpus of spoken Danish has documented a rise in the use of generic du in Copenhagen (and later in the rest of Denmark) during the period from the early 1970s, where generic du was practically non-existent, till the late 1980s where du comprised around 25% of all pronouns with generic meaning. However, recordings from the 2000s show that the use of du has peaked and is now decreasing or stabilizing at a lower level.This article focuses on intra-individual and intra-conversational variation within the LANCHART corpus with the aim of uncovering the pragmatic effect of using du instead of other generic pronouns. All passages in the recordings have been coded according to macro speech act, activity type, type of interaction and genre as well as enunciation. The results of a statistical analysis using mixed models show a number of correlations as to the use of generic du (in comparison with man), and by and large support the claim that generic du is used as a resource for construing involvement, arguably by exploiting the ambiguity of du between a generic and a specific second person meaning. These quantitative results make up the point of departure for corroborating qualitative analyses of the discourse framing of the use of generic pronouns.

AB - In modern Danish, the most frequently used pronoun for generic reference is man, developed from the noun man(d) ‘man’. Recently, though, the second person singular pronoun du has gained ground, in parallel to similar recent developments in other languages. A large-scale, longitudinal study of the LANCHART corpus of spoken Danish has documented a rise in the use of generic du in Copenhagen (and later in the rest of Denmark) during the period from the early 1970s, where generic du was practically non-existent, till the late 1980s where du comprised around 25% of all pronouns with generic meaning. However, recordings from the 2000s show that the use of du has peaked and is now decreasing or stabilizing at a lower level.This article focuses on intra-individual and intra-conversational variation within the LANCHART corpus with the aim of uncovering the pragmatic effect of using du instead of other generic pronouns. All passages in the recordings have been coded according to macro speech act, activity type, type of interaction and genre as well as enunciation. The results of a statistical analysis using mixed models show a number of correlations as to the use of generic du (in comparison with man), and by and large support the claim that generic du is used as a resource for construing involvement, arguably by exploiting the ambiguity of du between a generic and a specific second person meaning. These quantitative results make up the point of departure for corroborating qualitative analyses of the discourse framing of the use of generic pronouns.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - generic reference

KW - pronouns

KW - style

KW - language variation and change

KW - ambiguity

U2 - 10.1075/prag.26.3.04jen

DO - 10.1075/prag.26.3.04jen

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 417

EP - 446

JO - Pragmatics

JF - Pragmatics

SN - 1018-2101

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 119590372