Academic literature on the topic 'Anglais (langue) – Subordination (linguistique) – Histoire'
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Journal articles on the topic "Anglais (langue) – Subordination (linguistique) – Histoire"
Godard, Barbara. "La traduction comme réception : les écrivaines québécoises au Canada anglais." TTR : traduction, terminologie, rédaction 15, no. 1 (July 29, 2003): 65–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/006801ar.
Full textDunoyer, Christiane. "Alpes." Anthropen, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17184/eac.anthropen.124.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Anglais (langue) – Subordination (linguistique) – Histoire"
Lelandais, Manon. "Expression multimodale de la subordination en anglais." Thesis, Nantes, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019NANT2018/document.
Full textBased on a video recording of conversational British English and within the framework of Multimodal Discourse Analysis, this study tests whether three different syntactic types of subordinate structures are evenly integrated to their environment. Subordinate constructions have been described in syntax as dependent forms elaborating on primary elements of discourse. Beyond showing that subordinate constructions are not evenly dependent on their environment depending on how speakers use the prosodic and kinetic modalities to express greater (in)dependency, our results in production as in perception suggest on the one hand that appositive clauses show more break than the other syntactic types, and on the other hand that the creation of a break mainly relies on prosodic cues
Vallée, Michaël. "La coordination et la subordination à l'épreuve des opérations énonciatives : le cas du connecteur "for"." Poitiers, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001POIT5007.
Full textLe, Draounlec Anne. "Étude présuppositionnelle des subordonnées temporelles." Toulouse 2, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997TOU20096.
Full textThe main goal of this dissertation is to show that the analysis of temporal subordinate clauses may benefit from a presuppositional approach. The study is divided in three parts. The first one is devoted to a survey of presuppositional inference in general (chapter 1), and of the "presupposition projection" problem. The second part defines in more precise terms the relation between presupposition and temporal subordination. It appears that the presuppositional character of temporal clauses explains how they take part in the organization of discourse (chapter 3). Chapter 4, more specifically devoted to the aspectual and temporal properties of temporal clauses, shows that they have a "subsidiary" reference time, which is also presupposed. In chapter 5, we examine the difficulties raised by temporal clauses referring to a future situation. We finally see, in chapter 6, that the absence of a reference time explains the difficulty in introducing a negation in the temporal clause. In the third part, the interest focuses on before-clauses which do not presuppose that the eventuality described has actually taken place. Chapter 7 develops the hypothesis that a contextual implication may justify the counterfactual interpretation of the subordinate clause. However, it appears that the analysis remains insatisfactory, for it fails to explain why, in some cases, the realization of the situation described in the clause is in suspension. In a attempt to resolve this difficulty, i show in chapter 8 that what plays a fundamental role is the perspective from which the presupposition is viewed
Castagné, Clotilde. "La logique énonciative des structures relatives "déviantes" en anglais contemporain." Paris 3, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1993PA030069.
Full textWithin the linguistic frame of the theory of enunciation this 6research deals with non-standard relative structures in oral english - zero subject relative pronoun, "as" and "what" relative pronouns and relative clauses with a redundant pronoun. First of all, we put forward a hypothesis about the so-called standard relatives, bringing into light the operation of preconstruction well illustrated by the acquisition of relatives by children. We then try to analyse the enunciative logic of non-standard relative structures in terms of discursive integration. Zero subject relatiwe commonly found in middle-english now appear in two main types of structures ("it is np" and there is np"). Each corresponds to different discursive patterns but to one and the same syntactic pattern in which the svo word order is maintained. This is also true of the other non-standard relatives, thus avoiding the operation of preconstruction above mentioned, and it seems to be a universal feature of relativisation in various languages in the world
Ranger, Graham. "Les constructions concessives en anglais moderne." Aix-Marseille 1, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997AIX1A025.
Full textThe study deals with those utterances normally labelled 'subordinate clauses of concession'. The metalinguistic construction of a concessive signification implies a three-way opposition between unicity and heterogeneity. Thus a supposedly unique concessive signification can in fact be constructed heterogeneously ; a single form can receive various interpretations ; the concessive signification itself can similarly be shown to be fundamentally heterogeneous, so that one might speak of concessive significations in the plural. For an accurate analysis of the construction of a concessive signification it is not sufficient to list potentially concessive forms, or to indicate various concessive effects in context. One must adopt an approach which works on the dialectic relation between the language-artefact and the activity of language (chapter 1). The problem posed by various sorts of concessive signification may be partially resolved using a unique concessive schema which all concessive utterances can be reduced to (chapter 2). The links between form and signification become less paradoxical if one accepts that a linguistic form does not refer to a rigid signification but to an abstract and deformable schematic form, which receives a precise signification only after complex interaction with other contextual elements. Thus the term of concessive construction is used not to mean a syntactical structure, but a veritable act of enunciative construction. Different means of constructing a concessive signification may be indicated : by differentiation (though etc. Chapter 3), by reference to a high degree (chapter 4), by a class-scanning operation (chapter 5), by markers of hypothesis (chapter 6), and by markers of negation (chapter 7). For each of these means of construction, one may demonstrate the existence of a formally motivated metalinguistic link between the schematic form postulated for the markers in question, the general concessive schema and the particular concessive signification
Kanté, Issa. "La complétive nominale finie : entre syntaxe et sémantique : une étude contrastive anglais-francais." Paris 13, 2011. http://scbd-sto.univ-paris13.fr/secure/ederasme_th_2011_kante.pdf.
Full textGardelle, Laure. "Le genre en anglais moderne (seizième siècle à nos jours) : le système des pronoms." Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040012.
Full textWhile grammars of English today view gender as a category that can be easily accounted for, they fail to explain many of its uses. For example, why are there so many variations in discourse for a given referent ? Why use the feminine sometimes for a ship or a lawn, but the masculine for a fork or a spider ? This thesis explores the true foundations of the category of gender in modern English, by analyzing those pronouns on which gender is marked. After defining the notion of gender and reviewing existing theories, it offers a detailed analysis of an extensive corpus sampling language use from the 16th century to the present. It shows obvious evolutions in the use of gender in discourse ; the study seeks to determine whether they reflect systemic evolutions or whether they can be ascribed to other factors. Finally, a cognitive description of the category, enriched with a brief comparison with dialects, enables to look into the fundamental function of gender
Mélac, Éric. "L'évidentialité en anglais - approche contrastive à partir d'un corpus anglais-tibétain." Thesis, Paris 3, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA030172/document.
Full textThis study aims to give a detailed description of evidentiality in English in contrast with Tibetan. It is based on a specialised corpus collected in Tibet and in England (TSC and CSC/LAC, 2010-2012, 10 h.).Tibetan has a complex and grammaticalised evidential system, and its description can provide a preliminary analytical grid for a semantic assessment of English evidentiality. Athentic examples and quantitative data from the corpus illustrate and supplement the analyses of the Tibetan verb phrase from previous research (Tournadre & Sangda Dorje 1998), in order to lay the foundation of the semantics of evidentiality. The evidential markers that emerge in the Tibetan and English sections of the corpus are examined so as to determine the parameters that motivate their usage. Tibetan evidentials are mainly grammatical and paradigmatised: copulas, verb suffixes and enclitics. English evidentials are either lexical or semi-grammatical: perception verbs, cognition verbs, speech verbs, modals, adverbs, conjuncts, parentheticals and discourse markers (Nuyts 2001a, Cappelli 2007, Sanders & Sweetser 2009, Mortensen 2010, Whitt 2010, Gisborne 2010, Miller 2008, Boulonnais 2010, Gurajek 2010, Kaltenböck et al. 2011, Heine 2013).This survey of Tibetan and English evidentiality provides precise data for the analysis of the consequences of a grammatical or a lexical rendering of this notion (Talmy 2000, Bybee et al. 1994, Nuyts 2001a, Boye & Harder 2009). Qualitative and quantitative evidence illustrates the differences in complexity, optionality, frequency, semantic restriction, speaker commitment, informative status and discourse strategy in the two systems. Finally, this study reassesses the assumed dichotomy between grammatical and lexical evidentiality (Aikhenvald 2004), arguing that evidentials in both Tibetan and English inhabit a lexicon-grammar multidimensional continuum, merely in different positions. This study does not question that the Tibetan evidential system is more grammaticalised than the English one, but it shows that the latter presents all the signs of partial grammaticalisation. This reassessment leads to the conclusion that evidentiality is a relevant and necessary notion for a thorough linguistic description of English
Leonarduzzi, Laetitia. "La subordonnée interrogative en anglais contemporain." Phd thesis, Université de Provence - Aix-Marseille I, 2000. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00597613.
Full textPassot, Frédérique. "La hiérarchisation des constituants discursifs dans un corpus d'anglais oral spontané." Phd thesis, Université de la Sorbonne nouvelle - Paris III, 2004. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00011240.
Full textL'étude de la subordination causale révèle l'apparition de formes nouvelles et d'usages propres à l'oral spontané. Distribution et valeur intersubjective distinguent ainsi cos de because. Plus généralement, la dépendance syntaxique entre propositions liées s'assouplit, les marqueurs de subordination contribuant essentiellement à l'organisation thématique.
Hauteur mélodique, intensité et pauses participent à l'édifice conversationnel à tous les plans qui nous intéressent. Nous montrons dans quelle mesure l'intonation contribue à la construction du consensus sur lequel se fonde l'échange, ainsi qu'à son organisation thématique et interactionnelle.
Books on the topic "Anglais (langue) – Subordination (linguistique) – Histoire"
Watching English change: An introduction to the study of linguistic change in standard Englishes in the twentieth century. London: Longman, 1994.
Find full textDavid, Graddol, Leith Dick 1947-, and Swann Joan, eds. English: History, diversity, and change. Milton Keynes [England]: Open University, 1996.
Find full textKelly, Ann Cline. Swift and the English language. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1988.
Find full textThe prodigal tongue: Dispatches from the future of English. [Toronto]: Random House Canada, 2008.
Find full textInc, ebrary, ed. Historical corpus stylistics: Media, technology and change. London: Continuum, 2008.
Find full textProper English?: Readings in language, history, and cultural identity. London: Routledge, 1991.
Find full textKelly, Ann Cline. Swift and the English Language. Univ of Pennsylvania Pr, 2001.
Find full textAmador-Moreno, Carolina P. Orality in Written Texts: Using Historical Corpora to Investigate Irish English 1700-1900. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
Find full textOrality in Written Texts: Using Historical Corpora to Investigate Irish English 1700-1900. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Find full textAmador-Moreno, Carolina P. Orality in Written Texts: Using Historical Corpora to Investigate Irish English 1700-1900. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Anglais (langue) – Subordination (linguistique) – Histoire"
Atangana, Marie Renée. "Apport du numérique dans la dynamisation et l’opérationnalisation des langues nationales au Cameroun." In Multilinguisme, multiculturalisme et représentations identitaires, 313–31. Observatoire européen du plurilinguisme, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/oep.goron.2021.01.0313.
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