Abstract

This article provides a detailed account of the pragmatic functions of final then in spoken English, based on corpus data from the British component of the International Corpus of English. The analysis shows that two different uses of final then need to be distinguished: a discourse marker then, which is used to link the utterance it accompanies to a preceding utterance that is retrospectively converted into a conditional protasis, and a modal particle then, which links an utterance to a pragmatic, i.e. non-verbalized, pretext and thus to a proposition outside the discourse. The article includes a discussion of the word-class membership and the grammaticalization of final then into a pragmatic marker and provides a descriptive schema that captures the functions of final then as a modal particle.

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