SPOKEN GRAMMAR AND INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION
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Spoken language is most commonly an interactive, face-to-face process. Meanings
are often created by referring to shared knowledge or by an understanding based
on context or because what is referred to is physically and visually present before
the speakers. Many items and structures in spoken grammar, therefore, reflect the
interpersonal dimension rather than the content of the message. They are outlined
here and dealt with in detail in the chapters and sections referred to.
Deictic expressions such as in here, over there, that one, this here, right now,
then
are common (
Û
93
). Situational ellipsis (e.g. someone asking someone:
Finished?
) is common because points of reference are often obvious to
participants (
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94
). Speakers also perform regular checks that understanding is
shared and they work hard to provide orientation for listeners and engage them
by means of headers (
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