Towards an Empirical Characterisation and a Corpus-Driven Taxonomy of Fragments in Written Contemporary English

  1. Yolanda Fernández-Pena 1
  1. 1 Universidade de Vigo
    info

    Universidade de Vigo

    Vigo, España

    ROR https://ror.org/05rdf8595

Revista:
RAEL: revista electrónica de lingüística aplicada

ISSN: 1885-9089

Ano de publicación: 2021

Volume: 20

Número: 1

Páxinas: 136-154

Tipo: Artigo

Outras publicacións en: RAEL: revista electrónica de lingüística aplicada

Resumo

This study investigates ‘fragments’ in contemporary English. Fragments are structurally noncanonical constituents that convey the propositional meaning of a full clause, such as Good Old Hendon next stop or What a weirdo. This investigation constitutes an innovative approach to the topic since it (i) explores fragments in exclusively written (i.e. planned/edited) discourse, and (ii) aims at providing a corpus-driven taxonomy and an empirical account of the constructions, strategies and phenomena that are classifiable as fragments based on linguistically objectifiable (formal/textual) criteria, two areas much neglected in prior literature. The results reveal that fragments are not uncommon in written registers, particularly in letters and novels/stories. The most frequent types identified are phrasal and verbless, followed by clausal, wh-fragments and Small Clauses. Most of them show a high rate of subject and/or verb omission whose recoverability in context is facilitated by means of functional elements or latent lexical items licensed by the construction itself.

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