Naturally occurring dialogue is by far the most frequent manifestation of human speech and therefore has a legitimate claim to being regarded as a prime object of study in the sciences of language. Looking at the factors which determine the structure of natural dialogue, one cannot escape the conclusion that not only what is being said but also what is being inferred from what is said contributes towards determining the sequence and content of moves as well as the choice of grammatical features which are crucial for dialogue cohesion and for the interpretation of utterances in dialogue: `Constellations of surface features of message form are the means by which speakers signal and listeners interpret what the activity is, how semantic conten...
The aim of this paper is to show that Swahili has several strategies to resolve verbal agreement wit...
The acquisition of abstract categories of language (such as tense, aspect and agreement among others...
There can be little doubt that social practices and culture a↵ect language; the interesting question...
Naturally occurring dialogue is by far the most frequent manifestation of human speech and therefore...
The dissertation is a description of several discourse markers in Swahili in a pragmatic framework w...
This study examines the pragmatic functions of the marker sawa in spoken Swahili. The data have been...
A full account is given of the verbal inflectional system of Swahili (excluding only relativised for...
In conversation, participants operate under the condition that they must demonstrate to each other w...
The aim of this paper is to show that Swahili has several strategies to resolve verbal agreement wit...
Cross-linguistic studies have shown that the felicity of sentences with non-canonical word can be ex...
This talk explores issues involved in investigating dialectal variation in Swahili. We report on a n...
The analysis presented in this paper provides a development of the idea that subject agreement marke...
This study analysed speech act as a basis for dialogue coherence in English language and its relativ...
This paper investigates the place of Swahili within a typological classification based on the morpho...
In this paper we argue that to a great extent noun class agreement in Swahili is based on inflection...
The aim of this paper is to show that Swahili has several strategies to resolve verbal agreement wit...
The acquisition of abstract categories of language (such as tense, aspect and agreement among others...
There can be little doubt that social practices and culture a↵ect language; the interesting question...
Naturally occurring dialogue is by far the most frequent manifestation of human speech and therefore...
The dissertation is a description of several discourse markers in Swahili in a pragmatic framework w...
This study examines the pragmatic functions of the marker sawa in spoken Swahili. The data have been...
A full account is given of the verbal inflectional system of Swahili (excluding only relativised for...
In conversation, participants operate under the condition that they must demonstrate to each other w...
The aim of this paper is to show that Swahili has several strategies to resolve verbal agreement wit...
Cross-linguistic studies have shown that the felicity of sentences with non-canonical word can be ex...
This talk explores issues involved in investigating dialectal variation in Swahili. We report on a n...
The analysis presented in this paper provides a development of the idea that subject agreement marke...
This study analysed speech act as a basis for dialogue coherence in English language and its relativ...
This paper investigates the place of Swahili within a typological classification based on the morpho...
In this paper we argue that to a great extent noun class agreement in Swahili is based on inflection...
The aim of this paper is to show that Swahili has several strategies to resolve verbal agreement wit...
The acquisition of abstract categories of language (such as tense, aspect and agreement among others...
There can be little doubt that social practices and culture a↵ect language; the interesting question...