READING AND INTERPRETING SUBJECTIVE MESSAGE UTTERANCES IN VERBAL COMMUNICATION
SÖZLÜ İLETİŞİMDE ÖZNEL İLETİ İÇEREN SÖZCELERİ OKUMAK VE YORUMLAMAK

Author : Selim YILMAZ -- Arsun Uras Yılmaz
Number of pages : 379-393

Abstract

This study will examine the utterances contain the situation and indicators of "subjectivity" in Turkish conversation. In Oral communication, to work on the concept of "subjectivity" necessarily requires taking into consideration the concepts "indicator / pointer". Speaker in a verbal interactions, using a number of pointers in a particular context and enunciation, naturally exhibit a subjective stance against the rhetoric voiced counterparts in the listener position. Prosodic element of subjectivity that may occur while demonstrators consisted mostly of fractional parts of the elements created by rhetorical linguistic phenomenon. They need to talk about two major linguistic class of fractional elements which "opinion" and "mode" are the elements. The most concrete example of the personal pronouns "I", speaking subject is an indication in terms of transport is an important determinant in terms of the subjective value of focusing and enunciation discourse itself. As such, the utterance can be located in different syntactic indicators of subjectivity and syntactic functions will be studied. Hence, the demonstrators of subjectivity don’t have a specific syntactic position, unlike it’s possible to say that they may take place anywhere in the utterance. Because of this syntactic condition, Turkish is also a flexible structure and functioning just fine. On the other hand, subjectivity demonstrators modal elements functioning in various utterances will focus on examining different syntactic functions, syntactic value and discursive position. However, speaking subject's personal stance and suprasegmental revealed the existence of subjectivity status of discourse structure that will be investigated prosodic elements and how it should be interpreted.

Keywords

Indicator, message, verbal communication, subjectivity, discoursive linguistics, enunciation

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