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Section B: Unseen extracts Text A – Transcript Talk in Life Text B – Extract Talk in Literature

Section B: Unseen extracts Text A – Transcript Talk in Life Text B – Extract Talk in Literature. WALT: Explore Talk in Life and theories associated with talk. WILF: Band 6 – Analyses Band 5 – Explores Band 4 – Explains Band 3 – Identifies. Review types of talk in life. Expressive Phatic

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Section B: Unseen extracts Text A – Transcript Talk in Life Text B – Extract Talk in Literature

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  1. Section B: Unseen extractsText A – Transcript Talk in LifeText B – Extract Talk in Literature WALT: Explore Talk in Life and theories associated with talk. WILF: Band 6 – Analyses Band 5 – Explores Band 4 – Explains Band 3 – Identifies

  2. Review types of talk in life • Expressive • Phatic • Transactional • Evaluative • Expository • Instructive • Persuasive • Collaborative • Performative • Exclamative • Declarative • Imperative • Discourse • Dialogue • Back-channel • Filler • Hedge • Idiolect • Sociolect • Utterance

  3. New terminology • Adjacency pairs – Parallel expressions used across the boundaries of individual speaking turns. They are suallyritualisitc and formulaic socially. For example ‘How are you?’ / ‘Fine thanks’. • Ellision– The omission or slurring of one or more sounds or syllables e.g. Gonna = going to, wannabe = want to be. • Tag question – Strings of words normally added to a declarative sentence to turn the statement into a question. E.G. ‘It’s a bit expensive round here, isn’t it?’

  4. Focus on spoken language theory Grice’s maxims. Make your conversational contribution such as is required, at the stage at which it occurs, but the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged. • Quantity – make your contributions as informative as required • Quality – do not say what you believe to be false, or anything for which you lack adequate evidence • Relation – be relevant • Manner – be clear

  5. Considering purpose

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