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El. knyga: Final Particles

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This volume brings together sixteen in-depth studies of final particles in various languages of the world, offering a rich variety of approaches to this still relatively underresearched class of elements.

The volume is of interest to typologists, to experts in syntax and the analysis of spoken language, and to linguists studying the form and function of final particles in single languages.

Final particles offers an overview of the different types of final particles found in typologically distinct languages, different methological approaches to the study of final particles, and of typical grammaticalization pathways that these elements have taken in different languages.
I Introduction
1 Introduction: Final particles from a typological perspective
3(36)
Sylvie Hancil
Margje Post
Alexander Haselow
II Discourse Analysis & Conversation Analysis
2 Sentence-final adverbials: Recurrent types and usage
39(16)
Pedro Urena Gomez-Moreno
3 Taking an interactional perspective on final particles: The case of Finnish mutta (`but')
55(22)
Aino Koivisto
4 Final particles in spoken German
77(34)
Alexander Haselow
III Grammaticalization
5 Some observations on the evolution of final particles
111(30)
Bernd Heine
Gunther Kaltenbock
Tania Kuteva
6 The evolution of Japanese toka in utterance-final position
141(16)
Yuki Taylor
7 Two types of conditionals and two different grammaticalization paths
157(24)
Rumiko Shinzato
8 The emergence of utterance-final particles in Korean
181(16)
Sung-Ock Sohn
9 The grammaticalization of final but. From conjunction to final particle
197(24)
Sylvie Hancil
IV Cognitive Approaches
10 Dutch particles in the right periphery
221(28)
Ton van der Wouden
Ad Foolen
11 A relevance-theoretic perspective on the Norwegian utterance-final particles da and altsa compared to their English counterpart then
249(36)
Thorstein Fretheim
12 The North Russian utterance-final particle dak as an information-structuring device
285(20)
Margje Post
13 A study of three particles in Khmer: tiv, mk, coh
305(28)
Denis Paillard
V Generative Approaches
14 Particles and Parameters in Wh-Questions
333(26)
Gabriela Soare
15 On sentential particles: A cross-linguistic study
359(28)
Francesca Del Gobbo
Nicola Munaro
Cecilia Poletto
16 Circumstantial PPs and the middle field in Japanese
387(20)
Kaori Takamine
17 Word order and the syntax of question particles
407(20)
Laura R. Bailey
Subject index 427(5)
Author index 432
Sylvie Hancil, University of Rouen, France; Alexander Haselow, University of Rostock; Margje Post, University of Bergen, Norway.