The Grammaticization of Topics in American Sign Language
The topic construction of American Sign Language (ASL), within a topic-comment discourse structure framework, is explained as having emerged from gestural, communicative roots. In modern ASL, the prototypical topic construction is understood to grammatically mark pragmatic information
that is accessible to both the signer and the addressee. But the construction is shown to have grammaticized further, with grammatical meaning having to do with text organization and with no reference to pragmatic, extra-linguistic information. The topic, however, is not seen as grammaticizing
into a subject. Rather, the grammaticized topic remains prominent in ASL, with its own distinct set of resulting functions.
Document Type: Research Article
Publication date: 01 January 1999
- International Journal sponsored by the Foundation "Foundations of Language"
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