Formal and Contextual Links Links: Demonstrative Comparative
Formal and Contextual Links Links: Demonstrative Comparative
Formal and Contextual Links Links: Demonstrative Comparative
COHESION IN ENGLISH
Reference Personal
Demonstrative
Comparative
Verbal
Clausal
Conjunction Adversative
Additive
Temporal
Causal
Collocation
PERSONAL REFERENCE
Personal reference items, are expressed through pronouns and
determiners. They serve to identify individuals and objects that are named
at some other point in the text.
COMPARATIVE REFERENCE
Comparative reference is expressed through adjectives and adverbs and
serves to compare items within a text in terms of identity or similarity.
Example:
nominal,
verbal
causal.
NOMINAL SUBSTITUTION: There are some new tennis balls in the bag.
These ones ’ve lost their bounce.
VERBAL SUBSTITUTION
A: Annie says you drink too much.
B: So do you!
CLAUSAL SUBSTITUTION
Is it going to rain?
Ellipsis
Ellipsis occurs when some essential structural element is omitted from
a sentence or clause and can only be recovered by referring to an
element in the predicting text. As with substitution,
a)nominal,
b)verbal
c)clausal.
B: Yes ,I have ( ).
CLAUSAL ELLIPSIS
A: Why’d you only set three places? Paul’s staying for dinner, isn’t
he?
CONJUNCTION:
Conjunction differs from reference, substitution and ellipsis in that it is
not a device for reminding the reader of previously mentioned entities,
actions and states of affairs.
LEXICAL COHESION
Lexical cohesion occurs when two words in a text are semantically
related in some way – in other words, they are related in terms of their
meaning.
Reiteration
Repetition
Synonym
Superordinate
General Word
Collocation
REITERATION
Reiteration includes repetition, synonym or near synonym,
super-ordinate, and general word.
Examples of each type follow.
REPETITION: What we lack in a newspaper is what we
should get. In a word, a ‘popular’ newspaper may be the
winning ticket.
SYNONYM: You could try reversing the car up the slope.
The incline isn’t all that steep.
SUPERORDINATE: Pneumonia has arrived with the cold
and wet conditions. The illness is striking everyone from
infants to the elderly.
GENERAL WORD
A : Did you try the steamed buns?
B : Yes, I didn’t like the things much.
COLLOCATION
Collocation can cause major problems for discourse analysis because it
includes all those items in a text that are semantically related. In some
cases this makes it difficult to decide for certain whether a cohesive
relationship exists or not. Most linguists who have written about
cohesion admit that lexical collocation is a problem, and some refuse to
deal with it because of this. The problems arise because collocation is
expressed through open rather than closed class items. In contrast,
there is no limit to the items that can be used to express collocation.
This means that it is difficult to establish sets of regularly co-occurring
words and phrases.
An additional problem is the fact that many lexical relationships are text- as well
as context-bound. This means that words and phrases that are related in one text
may not be related in another. For example, the words neighbour and scoundrel
are not related at all. However, in the following text they are synonyms.
Example : My neighbour has just let one of his trees fall my garden. And the
scoundrel refuses to pay for the damage he has caused.
The End….