Discourse markers have been described as "nervous tics, fillers, or signs of hesitation", and are frequently dismissed as features of lazy or inarticulate speech. Yet in fact they have a number of crucial functions in spoken interaction, such as buying time, managing turn taking, linking utterances, introducing a new topic and indicating the degree of speaker involvement. Discourse markers are said to be used more in conversational speech than in any other form of communication. For this reason, it is essential that we teach our language students how to recognise, understand and use these markers in spoken interaction. Because of their slipperiness, however, discourse markers are often omitted from the language classroom. This art...
My research focuses on selected discourse features of spoken French, especially those typical of pre...
In this talk I will give an overview of my work on spoken discourse segmentation and on discourse ma...
Starting from the common observation that there is no recognized closed class of discourse markers (...
This article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that allows to identify syn...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
In this paper, we discuss the question of discourse markers (DM) – a category conceived differently ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
The topic of this presentation is methodological. It reports on an ongoing (manual) annotation exper...
The topic of this presentation is methodological. It reports on an ongoing (manual) annotation exper...
Spoken language is characterized by the occurrence of linguistic devices such as discourse markers (...
Spoken language is characterized by the occurrence of linguistic devices such as discourse markers (...
My research focuses on selected discourse features of spoken French, especially those typical of pre...
In this talk I will give an overview of my work on spoken discourse segmentation and on discourse ma...
Starting from the common observation that there is no recognized closed class of discourse markers (...
This article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that allows to identify syn...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
In this paper, we discuss the question of discourse markers (DM) – a category conceived differently ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
International audienceThis article focuses on the role of corpus in language classroom, a tool that ...
The topic of this presentation is methodological. It reports on an ongoing (manual) annotation exper...
The topic of this presentation is methodological. It reports on an ongoing (manual) annotation exper...
Spoken language is characterized by the occurrence of linguistic devices such as discourse markers (...
Spoken language is characterized by the occurrence of linguistic devices such as discourse markers (...
My research focuses on selected discourse features of spoken French, especially those typical of pre...
In this talk I will give an overview of my work on spoken discourse segmentation and on discourse ma...
Starting from the common observation that there is no recognized closed class of discourse markers (...