ABSTRACT

Sadanobu's research on fluency and disfluency in Japanese reveals that disfluency among healthy native speakers follows predictable patterns and may actually enhance their everyday communication.

The book challenges the conventional view that disfluency should simply be eliminated by demonstrating that it serves dual purposes, both as an obstacle to overcome and a valuable communicative tool that speakers learn and strategically employ in conversation. Drawing from diverse fields including linguistics, conversation analysis, language education, and language disorders research, the contributors build a compelling case for this nuanced perspective. They extend their analysis to practical applications in second language teaching and speech synthesis, presenting disfluency as a spectrum that encompasses native speakers, language learners, and language-impaired individuals. Their findings reveal that disability-induced disfluency exists on a continuum with typical speaker disfluency rather than representing a separate phenomenon.

This is an essential book for academics and researchers on oral communication, especially in Linguistics and Japanese studies.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

part I|104 pages

“Grammar” of disfluencies

Title

chapter 1|49 pages

Disfluency as a black light

Title
Size: 23.76 MB

chapter 2|16 pages

Annotating disfluencies in spontaneous Japanese

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A corpus-based study
Size: 7.71 MB

chapter 3|18 pages

How can ‘incomplete' sentences be well-formed utterances?

Title
The conventionality of Japanese te-ending utterances
Size: 6.98 MB

chapter 4|19 pages

Co-occurring connectives

Title
A corpus study of formulaicity as spontaneously arising means to reduce disfluency in Japanese written discourse
Size: 7.40 MB

part II|55 pages

“Usages” of disfluencies

Title

chapter 5|18 pages

Epistemicity-oriented disfluency in Japanese conversation

Title
Disfluencies from interactional perspective
Size: 7.01 MB
Size: 6.99 MB

chapter 7|17 pages

Naturally ‘disfluent'

Title
The repeated Japanese adverb chotto ‘a little' in conversation 1
Size: 6.61 MB

part III|50 pages

“Learning/teaching” of disfluencies

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Size: 3.07 MB
Size: 9.86 MB

part IV|44 pages

Beyond existing fields of native/L2 learner/pathological disfluencies

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Size: 8.27 MB

chapter 13|13 pages

Between fluency and disfluency

Title
Some considerations on the “disfluency continuum”
Size: 6.02 MB