Monitoring shared knowledge
109b
Two of the most common discourse markers are you know and (you) see. Both
these markers signal that speakers are sensitive to the needs of their listeners and
are monitoring the state of shared knowledge in the conversation.
(You) see
projects the assumption that the listener may not have the same state
of knowledge as the speaker:
You see, since I’ve damaged my back in that fall, I find it difficult to climb the
stairs without help.
(speaker cannot assume the listener knows this)
You do it like this. Cut the branches right back,
see, then cut them into smaller
pieces.
You know
projects the assumption that knowledge is shared or that assertions are
uncontroversial, and reinforces common points of reference, or checks that the
listener is following what is being said:
If you got the earliest train in the morning and then,
you know, like, got the last
train back at night, it might be cheaper that way.
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