Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics

The paper is concerned with a particular nickname construction in German in which a linguistic expression is inserted between the given name and surname and enclosed by quotation marks (Johanna „Hansi“ Angermeier) or parentheses (Ursula (Uschi) Vollmuth). The apparent interchangeability of quotation...

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Main Author: Finkbeiner Rita
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2023-03-01
Series:Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/ling-2021-0084
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author Finkbeiner Rita
author_facet Finkbeiner Rita
author_sort Finkbeiner Rita
collection DOAJ
description The paper is concerned with a particular nickname construction in German in which a linguistic expression is inserted between the given name and surname and enclosed by quotation marks (Johanna „Hansi“ Angermeier) or parentheses (Ursula (Uschi) Vollmuth). The apparent interchangeability of quotation marks and parentheses in the construction raises the question of the exact meaning of the (variants of the) construction and what the respective punctuation marks contribute to this meaning. The aim of the paper is to develop a comprehensive account of the variation by unfolding the complex interplay between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics in the meaning constitution of the construction. Based on a close linguistic analysis of examples from a corpus of death notices and supplemented by recent graphematic and pragmatic accounts on punctuation marks, the view is developed that the choice of quotation marks and parentheses is governed by two different, independent processes which partly overlap in the construction. While both quotation marks and parentheses play a role in marking an underlying parenthetical structure, quotation marks are richer in meaning, triggering an additional context shift effect and further conversational implicatures. The analysis lends support to the view that parentheses are boundary signals operating on syntactic structure, while quotation marks are boundary signals operating on the meaning of linguistic expressions.
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spelling doaj.art-dc8e87fac21c40218c1db0503416d83c2024-04-15T07:41:57ZengDe GruyterLinguistics0024-39491613-396X2023-03-0161231735410.1515/ling-2021-0084Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmaticsFinkbeiner Rita0FB 05, Deutsches Institut, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Mainz, GermanyThe paper is concerned with a particular nickname construction in German in which a linguistic expression is inserted between the given name and surname and enclosed by quotation marks (Johanna „Hansi“ Angermeier) or parentheses (Ursula (Uschi) Vollmuth). The apparent interchangeability of quotation marks and parentheses in the construction raises the question of the exact meaning of the (variants of the) construction and what the respective punctuation marks contribute to this meaning. The aim of the paper is to develop a comprehensive account of the variation by unfolding the complex interplay between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics in the meaning constitution of the construction. Based on a close linguistic analysis of examples from a corpus of death notices and supplemented by recent graphematic and pragmatic accounts on punctuation marks, the view is developed that the choice of quotation marks and parentheses is governed by two different, independent processes which partly overlap in the construction. While both quotation marks and parentheses play a role in marking an underlying parenthetical structure, quotation marks are richer in meaning, triggering an additional context shift effect and further conversational implicatures. The analysis lends support to the view that parentheses are boundary signals operating on syntactic structure, while quotation marks are boundary signals operating on the meaning of linguistic expressions.https://doi.org/10.1515/ling-2021-0084conversational implicaturedeath noticeparenthesespragmatic indicatorproper namequotation markssyntactic insertion
spellingShingle Finkbeiner Rita
Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics
Linguistics
conversational implicature
death notice
parentheses
pragmatic indicator
proper name
quotation marks
syntactic insertion
title Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics
title_full Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics
title_fullStr Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics
title_full_unstemmed Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics
title_short Quotational nicknames in German at the interface between syntax, punctuation, and pragmatics
title_sort quotational nicknames in german at the interface between syntax punctuation and pragmatics
topic conversational implicature
death notice
parentheses
pragmatic indicator
proper name
quotation marks
syntactic insertion
url https://doi.org/10.1515/ling-2021-0084
work_keys_str_mv AT finkbeinerrita quotationalnicknamesingermanattheinterfacebetweensyntaxpunctuationandpragmatics