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  1. Grammar in Everyday Talk: Building Responsive Actions.Sandra A. Thompson, Barbara A. Fox & Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    Drawing on everyday telephone and video interactions, this book surveys how English speakers use grammar to formulate responses in ordinary conversation. The authors show that speakers build their responses in a variety of ways: the responses can be longer or shorter, repetitive or not, and can be uttered with different intonational 'melodies'. Focusing on four sequence types: responses to questions, responses to informings, responses to assessments, and responses to requests, they argue that an interactional approach holds the key to explaining (...)
     
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  2.  20
    The clause as a locus of grammar and interaction.Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen & Sandra A. Thompson - 2005 - Discourse Studies 7 (4-5):481-505.
    This article draws on work at the interface of grammar and interaction to argue that the clause is a locus of interaction, in the sense that it is one of the most frequent grammatical formats which speakers orient to in projecting what actions are being done by others' utterances and in acting on these projections. Yet the way in which the clause affords grammatical projectability varies significantly from language to language. In fact, it depends on the nature of the clausal (...)
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  3.  14
    Language in Time: The Rhythm and Tempo of Spoken Interaction.Peter Auer, Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen & Frank Müller - 1999 - Oxford University Press USA.
    The authors here promote the reintroduction of temporality into the description and analysis of spoken interaction. They argue that spoken words are, in fact, temporal objects and that unless linguists consider how they are delivered within the context of time, they will not capture the full meaning of situated language use. Their approach is rigorously empirical, with analyses of English, German, and Italian rhythm, all grounded in sequences of actual talk-in-interaction.
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  4. Exploring affiliation in the reception of conversational complaint stories.Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen - 2012 - In Marja-Leena Sorjonen & Anssi Peräkylä (eds.), Emotion in interaction. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 113--146.
     
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  5.  17
    Increments in cross-linguistic perspective: Introductory remarks.Tsuyoshi Ono & Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen - 2007 - In Noel Burton-Roberts (ed.), Pragmatics. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 17--4.
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    On assessing situations and events in conversation: `extraposition' and its relatives.Sandra A. Thompson & Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen - 2008 - Discourse Studies 10 (4):443-467.
    Recent research provides strong evidence that the syntacticization of recurrent multi-actional and interactional patterns for accomplishing social actions is quite a general phenomenon. Drawing on a body of audio and video recordings, we consider three pervasive conversational patterns whereby English speakers carry out the assessing of an event or situation, and the interactional contingencies which give rise to these patterns. We propose that one of these patterns can be revealingly understood as having syntacticized to a grammatical and prosodically unified construction (...)
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  7. ÖGS, 2000. Berthoff, Ann E., The Mysterious Barricades: Language and its Limits (= Toronto Studies in Semiotics). Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999. Bondeson, Jan, The Feejee Mermaid and Other Essays in Natural and Unnatural History. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1999. [REVIEW]Peter Auer, Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen & Frank Muller - 2000 - Semiotica 132 (1/2):171-177.
     
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