Development of interactional discourse markers: Insights from Turkish children's and adults’ oral narratives

Furman, Reyhan orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-6034-3820 and Özyürek, Aslı (2007) Development of interactional discourse markers: Insights from Turkish children's and adults’ oral narratives. Journal of Pragmatics, 39 (10). pp. 1742-1757. ISSN 0378-2166

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pragma.2007.01.008

Abstract

Discourse markers (DMs) are linguistic elements that index different relations and coherence between units of talk (Schiffrin, Deborah, 1987. Discourse Markers. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge). Most research on the development of these forms has focused on conversations rather than narratives and furthermore has not directly compared children's use of DMs to adult usage. This study examines the development of three DMs (şey ‘uuhh’, yani ‘I mean’, işte ‘y’know’) that mark interactional levels of discourse in oral Turkish narratives in 60 Turkish children (3-, 5- and 9-year-olds) and 20 Turkish-speaking adults. The results show that the frequency and functions of DMs change with age. Children learn şey, which mainly marks exchange level structures, earliest. However, yani and işte have multi-functions such as marking both information states and participation frameworks and are consequently learned later. Children also use DMs with different functions than adults. Overall, the results show that learning to use interactional DMs in narratives is complex and goes beyond age 9, especially for multi-functional DMs that index an interplay of discourse coherence at different levels.


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