Listing linking adjuncts indicate that the text segments in which they occur form
part of a list of segments. These include:
Single-word
There are
two
problems with assuming that our figure applies to the whole
Chinese population.
First, we ‘measured’ lefthandedness by looking at which hand each student
wrote with. This is only a restricted definition of lefthandedness.
Secondly, the student population may not be representative of the population
as a whole. But we do not believe that any bias in the sample would account
for the difference between Gooch’s figure of 18 per cent and ours of 3 per cent.
Phrasal/clausal
Meta-textual (namely, so to speak)
136j
Meta-textual linking adjuncts indicate that the text segment they introduce either
explains, paraphrases, exemplifies or relates topically to the previous segment or
represents a temporary digression from the previous segment or a shift in topic.
These include:
Single-word
(*particularly frequent in informal spoken contexts)
A: We never do much at Arthur and Clarissa’s in the mornings, as you know.
B: How is he, incidentally?
A: Oh Arthur is better than he was two years ago.
Phrasal/clausal
(*particularly frequent in informal spoken contexts)
A: I’m wallpapering this week and doing all the little jobs, you know, that need
doing.
B: Oh I know. I know.
A: Isn’t it boring.
B: Yeah. Oh, how did you get on by the way at the doctor’s? Er you went on Friday.
A: Oh I’ll tell you about it over the weekend.
[review of the technical features of a digital camera]
You can even automatically place images in prespecified positions in
documents.
In other words, it is the shape of digital cameras to come.
A–Z
54
Now; 76
Well
Coordinating conjunctions (and, but, or) and sentence boundaries
137
In writing, the coordinating conjunctions and, but and or are traditionally viewed as being
inappropriate as the first item in a sentence. However, they frequently occur as sentence
beginners in both speech and writing, though less so in very formal and academic writing
styles. In this way they provide important cohesive links between sentences, and should not
be thought of as ‘bad style’:
A universal cry of horror and fury arose: Vengeance! The bodies of the victims were
loaded on a cart lit with torches. The cortege moved back amidst curses at a funeral
pace.
And in a few hours Paris was covered with barricades.
Glass could be impregnated with inorganic pesticides, then ploughed into the land.
Or pellets impregnated with trace elements could improve the diets of cattle; in
impoverished pastures similar pellets would protect cattle from parasites.
by the way*
for example
for instance
in other words
or rather
so to speak
that is
that is to say
to put it another way
incidentally
indeed
namely
now
well*
262 | Grammar across turns and sentences
Cambridge Grammar of English