• Title of article

    Tag Questions in British and American English

  • Author/Authors

    Gunnel Tottie Sebastian Hoffmann، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
  • Pages
    29
  • From page
    283
  • To page
    311
  • Abstract
    This large-scale corpus study charts differences between British English and American English as regards the use of “canonical” tag questions such as Itʹs raining, isnʹt it?, Itʹs not raining, is it?, or Itʹs raining, is it? Several thousand instances of question tags were extracted from the British National Corpus and the Longman Spoken American Corpus, yielding nine times as many tag questions in colloquial British English as in colloquial American English (but also important register differences in British English). Polarity types and operators in tags also differ in the two varieties. Preliminary results concerning pragmatic functions point to a higher use of “facilitating” tags involving interlocutors in conversation in American English. Speaker age is important in both varieties, with older speakers using more canonical tag questions than younger speakers.
  • Keywords
    tag questions differences between British and American English discourse spoken interaction negation polarity age grading language change corpus linguistics retrieval methods
  • Journal title
    Journal of English Linguistics(JELng)
  • Serial Year
    2006
  • Journal title
    Journal of English Linguistics(JELng)
  • Record number

    708225