Abstract

This article presents a corpus-based study of the pragmatic markers you know and I mean in contemporary spoken American English. Previous research indicates that you know and I mean are polysemous in their discourse roles, serving various functions in speech. By drawing on tokens extracted from the Corpus of Contemporary American English, the Corpus of American Soap Operas and the Corpus of Spoken, Professional American English, which include data from text types differing on the scales of formality and spontaneity, the main aims are 1) to compare the use of these two pragmatic markers and 2) to explore whether and how their behavior differs in three text types: TV and radio programs, soap operas, and White House press conferences and faculty/committee meetings. The results demonstrate that, despite overlapping in some of their functions, you know and I mean cannot be used interchangeably in discourse. Additionally, the functions of the two pragmatic markers vary significantly depending on the corpora, which is due to the particular characteristics of the speech situations in which they are used.

Highlights

  • This article presents a corpus-based study of the pragmatic markers you know and I mean in contemporary spoken American English

  • The data used for the analysis of you know and I mean is drawn from three corpora of contemporary American spoken English: the spoken component of Contemporary American English (COCA), the Corpus of American Soap Operas (SOAP) (Davies 2011–), and the Corpus of Spoken, Professional American English (CSPAE) (Barlow 2000)

  • I was left with a total of 83, 60, and 72 Pragmatic Markers (PMs) uses of you know and 96, 93, and 98 uses of I mean in COCA, SOAP, and CSPAE, respectively (Section 4)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION1

The Pragmatic Markers (PMs) you know and I mean are especially prolific in spoken discourse. Further research is still needed to (a) clarify the multiple functions they serve in different discourse types and (b) demonstrate that, despite their functional similarities, they do exhibit different behavior in discourse. Against this backdrop, this article presents a corpus-based analysis of the two PMs you know and I mean across three different discourse types in American Present-day English (PDE): radio and TV programs, soap operas, and White House press conferences and committee or faculty meetings..

PRAGMATICS MARKERS
DATA AND METHODOLOGY
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Comparing I mean and you know
The case of I mean
The case of you know
SOME CONCLUDING REMARKS

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