appendix 13: narrative writing bibliography (messy)

Messy list of mostly very academic references I found helpful (directly or indirectly) for narrative writing. cf. redo-to-undo, among other things. Compare with p1 appendix, see regarding x-desires, and other sections, too.

(Lots and lots of duplication of entries, at the moment.)

-

      • Gisborne, Nikolas. "The event structure of perception verbs." (2010).
      • Page, Anna Katarina. "Causation is non-eventive." (2023).
      • https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q="one+new+idea+constraint"+"intonation+unit"+chafe+"ellipsis"+OR+"gapping"+redundancy+"light+subject+constraint" [Last accessed: 2025-01-03]
        • Search string: "one new idea constraint" "intonation unit" chafe "ellipsis" OR "gapping" redundancy "light subject constraint"
        • Search string: "one new idea constraint" "intonation unit" chafe ellipsis OR gapping redundancy "light subject"
        • [maybe misleading] Tao, Hongyin, and Charles F. Meyer. "Gapped coordinations in English: Form, usage, and implications for linguistic theory." (2006): 129-163.
        • Hall, Rayne. The Word-Loss Diet: Professional Self-Editing Techniques for Authors. Writer's Craft Series (book 4). 2014.
      • Mellquist, Simone. "Russian converb constructions corresponding to Swedish purposive för att ‘in order to’+ infinitive constructions." Poljarnyj vestnik 27 (2024): 1-37.
      • Dowty, David R. Word meaning and Montague grammar: The semantics of verbs and times in generative semantics and in Montague's PTQ. Vol. 7. Springer Science & Business Media, 1979, 2012.
        • Martin, Fabienne. "Aspectual differences between agentive and non-agentive uses of causative predicates." Perspectives on causation: Selected papers from the Jerusalem 2017 Workshop. Springer International Publishing, 2020.
        • Neeleman, Ad, and Hans Van de Koot. "The non-existence of sub-lexical scope." Linguistic variations: Structure and interpretation. A festschrift in honour of Rita Manzini (2017).
      • Ojea, Ana. "On the Eventive Structure of Adjectives and Adverbs." Atlantis (1998): 159-175.
      • Bennett, J., 1987. “Event Causation: the Counterfactual Analysis”, Philosophical Perspectives, 1: 367–86.
      • Heine, Bernd. The grammar of interactives. Oxford University Press, 2023.
      • Leech Geoffrey, N., and H. Short Michael. Chapter: "Mind Style" in "Style in fiction." A linguistic introduction to English fictional prose. Longman Group Limited (1981).
        • Lugea, J., Walker, B. (2023). Mind Style. In: Stylistics. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.
        • McIntyre, Dan and Archer, Dawn. "A corpus-based approach to mind style" Journal of Literary Semantics, vol. 39, no. 2, 2010, pp. 167-182.
      • Semino, Elena. & Short, M. "Corpus Stylistics: Speech, Writing and Thought Presentation in a Corpus of English Writing." (2004).
        • Vandelanotte, Lieven. Speech and thought representation in English: A cognitive-functional approach. Mouton de Gruyter, 2009.
          • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_relation [Last accessed: 2024-12-30]
          • Ylikoski, Petri. "Causal and constitutive explanation compared." Erkenntnis 78 (2013): 277-297.
          • https://www.google.com/search?q="synchronic+dependence" [Last accessed: 2024-12-30]
          • Bennett, Karen. Making things up. Oxford University Press, 2017.
          • Fine, Kit. "The question of realism." Individuals, essence and identity: Themes of analytic metaphysics. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2002. 3-48.
          • Paul, Laurie Ann, and Edward Jonathan Hall. Causation: A user's guide. Oxford University Press, 2013.
          • Zwicky, Arnold M., Ann D. Zwicky, and B. Kachru. "How come and what for." (1973).
          • Bruening, Benjamin. "Light verbs are just regular verbs." Proceedings of the 39th Annual Penn Linguistics Conference (U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics). Vol. 22. No. 1. 2016.
          • Gibson, James J. The ecological approach to visual perception: classic edition. Psychology press, 2014.
          • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affordance [Last accessed: 2024-12-24]
          • Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. "Phenomenology of perception." Humanities (1945, 1962 translated).
              • Wittenberg, Eva. With light verb constructions from syntax to concepts. Vol. 7. Universitätsverlag Potsdam, 2016.
              • Tron, A., Derevianko, O., Zhumbei, M., & Shpilchak, L. (2022). Light Verb Constructions as Means of Expressing Semelfactive/Multiplicative Meanings in J.K. Rowling’s Discourse (on the basis of novels ‘Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone’ and ‘Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets’). Amazonia Investiga, 11(50), 43–54. https://doi.org/10.34069/AI/2022.50.02.5
              • Alexiadou, Artemis, and Jane Grimshaw. "Verbs, nouns and affixation." (2008).
              • Grimshaw, J., Williams, E. (1993). Nominalization and Predicative Prepositional Phrases. In: Pustejovsky, J. (eds) Semantics and the Lexicon. Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy, vol 49. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-1972-6_7
              • Grimshaw, Jane. 1990. Argument Structure. MIT Press.
  • Chen, Yiting. "Macro-events in Verb–verb Compounds from the Perspective of Baseline and Elaboration: Iconicity in Typology and Grammaticalization." Cognitive Semantics 6.1 (2020): 1-28.

  • Talmy, Leonard. Toward a cognitive semantics, volume 1: Concept structuring systems. Vol. 1. MIT press, 2003.

  • Talmy, Leonard. "Toward a cognitive semantics, Volume 2: Typology and process in concept structuring." (2000).

  • Spring, Ryan. "Teaching phrasal verbs more efficiently: using corpus studies and cognitive linguistics to create a particle list." Advances in Language and Literary Studies 9.5 (2018): 121-135.

  • Zwicky, Arnold M., Ann D. Zwicky, and B. Kachru. "How come and what for." (1973).

    • Wickboldt, June Marie. The semantics of since. Indiana University, 1998.
    • Davison, Alice. Performative verbs, adverbs and felicity conditions: an inquiry into the nature of performative verbs. The University of Chicago, 1973.
    • Radford, Andrew. Colloquial English: Structure and Variation. Cambridge University Press, 2018.
    • Chaves, Rui P., and Michael T. Putnam. Unbounded dependency constructions: Theoretical and experimental perspectives. Vol. 10. Oxford Surveys in Syntax & Mor, 2020.
      • Levine, Robert, and Thomas Emerson Hukari. "The unity of unbounded dependency constructions." (No Title) (2006).
  • Di Pego, Gerald. WRITE! Find the Truth in Your Fiction. 2016.

    • King, Stephen. Stephen King on Writing: A Memoir on the Craft. SIMON AND SCHUSTER, 2000.
  • Horwitz, S. Book Architecture: How to Plot and Outline Without Using a Formula. ISBN-10: 0986420409. ISBN-13: 978-0986420405. 2015.

  • Faulkner, Laura. "" That's convenient, not to say odd": Coincidence, Causality, and Hardy's Inconsistent Inconsistency." Victorian Review 37.1 (2011): 92-107.

  • Salkie, Raphael. "Enablement and possibility." Modes of modality. Modality, typology and universal grammar (2014): 319-352.

  • Richardson, Brian. Unlikely stories: Causality and the nature of modern narrative. University of Delaware Press, 1997.

  • Dannenberg, Hilary P. Coincidence and counterfactuality: Plotting time and space in narrative fiction. U of Nebraska Press, 2008.

  • Ryan, Marie-Laure. "Cheap plot tricks, plot holes, and narrative design." Narrative 17.1 (2009): 56-75.

  • Grener, Adam. "Coincidence as Realist Technique: Improbable Encounters and the Representation of Selfishness in Martin Chuzzlewit." Narrative, vol. 20 no. 3, 2012, p. 322-342. Project MUSE.

  • Glynn, Luke. "Causal foundationalism, physical causation, and difference-making." Synthese 190 (2013): 1017-1037.

  • Sloman, Steven A., and David Lagnado. "Causality in thought." Annual review of psychology 66.1 (2015): 223-247.

  • John Antonakis, Samuel Bendahan, Philippe Jacquart, Rafael Lalive, On making causal claims: A review and recommendations, The Leadership Quarterly, Volume 21, Issue 6, 2010, Pages 1086-1120, ISSN 1048-9843.

  • Strevens, M. Causality Reunified. Erkenn 78 (Suppl 2), 299–320 (2013).

  • Strevens, Michael. Depth: An account of scientific explanation. Harvard University Press, 2011.

  • Psillos, Stathis & Ioannidis, Stavros (2019). Mechanistic Causation: Difference-Making is Enough. Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy 3 (38):53-75.

  • Lewis, D. “Causation as Influence” (expanded version), in Collins, Hall, and Paul 2004, 75–106.

  • Noordhof, P., 2004. “Prospects for a Counterfactual Theory”, in Dowe and Noordhof 2004, 188–201.

  • Bennett, J., 1987. “Event Causation: the Counterfactual Analysis”, Philosophical Perspectives, 1: 367–86.

  • Fowler, Roger. "Style and the concept of deep structure." Journal of Literary Semantics 1.Jahresband (1972): 5-24.
  • Rosaler, Ruth. Conspicuous silences: Implicature and fictionality in the Victorian novel. Oxford University Press, 2016.
  • Contemori, C., Hendriks, P., Köder, F., Maier, E., Vogels, J., & Zeman, S. (Eds.). (2023). Perspective Taking in Language. Frontiers Media SA.
  • Grimm, S., and B. Levin. "Artifact Nouns: Reference and Countability," Proceedings of the 47th Annual Meeting of North East Linguistic Society (NELS 47). GLSA (Graduate Linguistics Student Association), Amherst, MA (2017).

  • Waldon, Brandon, et al. "On the context dependence of artifact noun interpretation." Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung. Vol. 27. 2023.

  • Levin, Beth, Lelia Glass, and Dan Jurafsky. "Systematicity in the semantics of noun compounds: The role of artifacts vs. natural kinds." Linguistics 57.3 (2019): 429-471.

  • Pustejovsky, James. The generative lexicon. MIT press, 1998.

  • Sperber, Dan. "Seedless grapes: nature and culture." Creations of the mind: Theories of artifacts and their representation (2007): 124-137.

  • Koenig, Jean-Pierre, and Anthony R. Davis. "Sublexical modality and the structure of lexical semantic representations." Linguistics and Philosophy 24 (2001): 71-124.

  • Abbott, Barbara. "Presuppositions as nonassertions." Journal of pragmatics 32.10 (2000): 1419-1437.

  • Glass, Lelia. "The red dress is cute: why subjective adjectives are more often predicative" Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory, 2024.

  • Abbott, Barbara. "Speaker's Reference: “Smith's Murderer”." The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Semantics (2020): 1-24.

  • Abbott, Barbara. “Nondescriptionality and Natural Kind Terms.” Linguistics and Philosophy, vol. 12, no. 3, 1989, pp. 269–91.

  • Casagrande, June. It was the best of sentences, it was the worst of sentences: A writer's guide to crafting killer sentences. Ten Speed Press, 2010.

  • Landon, Brooks. Building great sentences: How to write the kinds of sentences you love to read. Penguin, 2013.

  • Christensen, Francis. "A generative rhetoric of the sentence." College Composition & Communication 14.3 (1963): 155-161.

  • Christensen, Francis. "Notes toward a New Rhetoric: I. Sentence Openers; II. A Lesson from Hemingway. College English, Volume 25, Issue 1, Oct 1963, p. 7 - 18.

  • Christensen, Francis. In Defense of the Absolute. College English , Apr., 1950, Vol. 11, No. 7 (Apr., 1950), pp. 401-403.

  • Pixton, W. H. (1990). On refining the free modifier. Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 20(2), 119–129.

  • Christensen, Francis. "The problem of defining a mature style." English Journal 57.4 (1968): 572-579.

  • non-finite adnomial adjuncts, adadjectival, adadverbial, recursive adjuncts, absolute phrases, appositive phrases versus arguments, complements, predicates

  • Huddleston, Rodney, Geoffrey K. Pullum, and Brett Reynolds. "Chapter 8: Adjuncts: modifiers and supplements" A student's introduction to English grammar. Cambridge University Press, 2021.

    • manner and means, act-related, locational, temporal, degree, cause and result, concessive, conditional, domain, modal, evaluative, speech act-related, connective adjuncts
  • Aloni, Maria. "Free choice and exhaustification: an account of subtrigging effects." Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung. Vol. 11. 2007.
  • Spiegel, Alan Harvey. FICTION AND THE CAMERA EYE: A STUDY OF VISUAL FORM IN THE MODERN NOVEL. University of Virginia, 1973.
  • Nielsen, Henrik Skov. "The impersonal voice in first-person narrative fiction." Narrative 12.2 (2004): 133-150.
  • Postal, Paul, David A. Reibel, and Sanford A. Schane. "On so-called pronouns in English." Readings in English transformational grammar 5 (1969): 12-25.
  • Campbell, Richard. "A null pronominal in the noun phrase." Linguistic inquiry 29.1 (1998): 153-160.
  • Playful Narrative: A Toolbox for Story-Rich Mechanics https://polarisgamedesign.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Playful-Narrative_-A-Toolbox-for-Story-Rich-Mechanics_Polaris2022.pdf [Last accessed: 2024-11-13]

  • Esipova, Maria. "On not-at-issueness in pictures." Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 6.1 (2021): 83.

  • Ball, David. Backwards and forwards: A technical manual for reading plays. SIU Press, 1983.

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory

  • Strauss, Leo. Persecution and the Art of Writing. University of Chicago Press, 1988.

  • Arijon, Daniel. Grammar of the Film Language. Silman-James Press, 1991.

  • Smith, Tim J. "The attentional theory of cinematic continuity." Projections 6.1 (2012): 1-27.

  • Cumming, Samuel, et al. "Showing seeing in film." Ergo an Open Access Journal of Philosophy 7 (2021).

  • Cumming, Samuel, Gabriel Greenberg, and Rory Kelly. "Conventions of viewpoint coherence in film." (2017).

  • Egamnazarova, Durdona. "THE USE OF PARADOX IN PROSE: AN EXPLORATION OF CONTRADICTION AS A LITERARY DEVICE." American Journal Of Philological Sciences 3.06 (2023): 23-33.
  • Hardy B. William Empson and" Seven Types of Ambiguity" //The Sewanee Review. – 1982. – Т. 90. – No. 3. – С. 430-439.
  • Oaks, Dallin D. "Structural ambiguity in English." Structural Ambiguity in English (2010): 1-576.
  • Ireland, Ken. The sequential dynamics of narrative: Energies at the margins of fiction. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 2001.
    • Alkon, Paul K. Defoe and fictional time. University of Georgia Press, 2010.
    • Caracciolo, Marco. "Tell-tale rhythms: Embodiment and narrative discourse." Storyworlds: A Journal of Narrative Studies 6.2 (2014): 49-73.
    • Martinec, Radan. "Rhythmic hierarchy in monologue and dialogue." Functions of language 9.1 (2002): 39-59.
    • Auer, Peter, Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen, and Frank Muller. Language in time: The rhythm and tempo of spoken interaction. Oxford University Press, 1999.
    • Maszerowska, Anna, Anna Matamala, and Pilar Orero, eds. Audio description: New perspectives illustrated. Vol. 112. John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2014.
    • Sternberg, Meir. Expositional modes and temporal ordering in fiction. Indiana University Press, 1993.
    • Segal, Eyal. "Narrative Beginnings: Relations between First Full-Fledged Scenes and the Beginning of the Main Action." Narrative 32.1 (2024): 1-20.
    • Gingrich, Brian. The pace of fiction: Narrative movement and the novel. Oxford University Press, 2021.
  • Allan, Rutger J. "Construal and immersion: A cognitive linguistic approach to Homeric immersivity." The Routledge Handbook of Classics and Cognitive Theory. Routledge, 2018. 59-78.

  • Lopes, José M. "Foregrounded Description in Prose Fiction: Five Cross-Literary Studies." (1995).

  • Furst, Lilian R. All is true: the claims and strategies of realist fiction. Duke University Press, 1995.

  • Reed, John R. Dickens's Hyperrealism. The Ohio State University Press, 2010.

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypotyposis [Last accessed: 2024-10-28]

  • Jean, Ricardou. Nouveaux problèmes du roman. Seuil, 1978.

  • John Hinds (1977) Paragraph structure and pronominalization, Paper in Linguistics, 10:1-2, 77-99
  • Padučeva, E. V.. "On the structure of the paragraph" Linguistics, vol. 12, no. 131, 1974, pp. 49-58.
  • Fox, Barbara. "Anaphora in popular written English narratives." Coherence and grounding in discourse 11 (1987): 157-174.
  • Bentivoglio, Paola, and Mercedes Sedano. "The light subject constraint in spoken Spanish." Lodz Papers in Pragmatics 3.1 (2007): 195-205.
  • Vonk, Wietske, Lettica GMM Hustinx, and Wim HG Simons. "The use of referential expressions in structuring discourse." Language and cognitive processes 7.3-4 (1992): 301-333.
        • Henschel, Renate, Hua Cheng, and Massimo Poesio. "Pronominalization revisited." COLING 2000 Volume 1: The 18th International Conference on Computational Linguistics. 2000.
          • Passonneau, R. J. (1996). Using Centering to Relax Gricean Informational Constraints on Discourse Anaphoric Noun Phrases. Language and Speech, 39(2-3), 229–264.
  • Jean, Ricardou. Nouveaux problèmes du roman. Seuil, 1978.
  • Bruening, Benjamin. "Light verbs are just regular verbs." Proceedings of the 39th Annual Penn Linguistics Conference (U. Penn Working Papers in Linguistics). Vol. 22. No. 1. 2016.

  • Ojea, Ana. "On the Eventive Structure of Adjectives and Adverbs." Atlantis (1998): 159-175.

      • Collins, Peter. "The indirect object construction in English: An informational approach." (1995): 35-50.
      • Allerton, David J. "Generating indirect objects in English." Journal of Linguistics 14.1 (1978): 21-33.
      • Hawkins, Roger. "On ‘Generating indirect objects in English’: a reply to Allerton1." Journal of Linguistics 17.1 (1981): 1-9.
      • Halamásková, Jana. "The position of direct and indirect objects of selected English ditransitive verbs." (2011).
      • Emonds, Joseph. "Projecting indirect objects." (1993): 211-264.
  • Heine, Bernd. The grammar of interactives. Oxford University Press, 2023.

  • Neveux, Julie. "Grammar and feelings: a study of Wh-exclamatives in Katherine Mansfield’s short stories." Études de stylistique anglaise 12 (2018): 193-222.

  • O’Connell, Daniel C., and Sabine Kowal. "Interjections in the Performance of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice." Journal of psycholinguistic research 39 (2010): 285-304.

  • Rett, Jessica. "Exclamatives, degrees and speech acts." Linguistics and philosophy 34 (2011): 411-442.

  • Taavitsainen, Irma. "Narrative Patterns of Affect in Four Genres of the" Canterbury Tales"." The Chaucer Review (1995): 191-210.

  • Smith, Paul. "Hemingway's Early Manuscripts: The Theory and Practice of Omission." Journal of Modern Literature 10.2 (1983): 268-288.
    • Hemingway. The Art Of The Short Story. La Consula, Churriana, Malaga, Spain. June, 1959.
  • Mafi, Tehereh. Shatter Me. Harper Collins, 2011.
  • Hough, Graham. "Narrative and dialogue in Jane Austen" Selected essays. CUP Archive, 1978. Originally published: The Critical Quarterly, 1970.
  • Bollas, Christopher. The shadow of the object: Psychoanalysis of the unthought known. Columbia University Press, 1987.
  • Stern, D. B. (2015). Unrepresented States and the Construction of Meaning: Clinical and Theoretical Contributions. The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 96(2), 493–498. https://doi.org/10.1111/1745-8315.12275
  • Hough, Graham. "Narrative and dialogue in Jane Austen" Selected essays. CUP Archive, 1978. Originally published: The Critical Quarterly, 1970.
    • Ikeo, R. (2007). Unambiguous free indirect discourse? a comparison between “straightforward” free indirect speech and thought presentation and cases ambiguous with narration. Language and Literature, 16(4), 367–387.
      • Semino, E. and Short, M. (2004) Corpus Stylistics: Speech, Writing and Thought Presentation in a Corpus of English Writing. London: Routledge.
    • Brinton, L. (1980). “Represented perception”: A study in narrative style. Poetics, 9(4), 363–381.
  • Murphy, Terence Patrick, and Kelly S. Walsh. "Unreliable third person narration? The case of Katherine Mansfield." Journal of Literary Semantics 46.1 (2017): 67-85.
  • Gunn, Daniel P. "Free indirect discourse and narrative authority in" Emma"." Narrative 12.1 (2004): 35-54.
  • NOTEBOOM, MATTHEW. "Emma’s Perception: The Riddle of Unconscious Thought in Jane Austen’s Emma." THE FOUNDATIONALIST: 161.
  • Ferguson, Frances. "Jane Austen, Emma, and the Impact of Form." MLQ: Modern Language Quarterly 61.1 (2000): 157-180.
      • Manganaro, Thomas Salem. "Free Indirect Discourse and the Problem of the Will in Two Novels by William Godwin." Studies in Romanticism 57.2 (2018): 301-323.
      • Brinton, L. (1980). “Represented perception”: A study in narrative style. Poetics, 9(4), 363–381.
        • Fehr, B. (1938). Substitutionary narration and description. English Studies, 20(1-6), 97–107.
  • Samek-Lodovici, Vieri. "Contrast, contrastive focus, and focus fronting." ms., University College London.
  • Gundel, Jeanette K., Nancy Hedberg, and Ron Zacharski. "Definite descriptions and cognitive status in English: Why accommodation is unnecessary." English Language & Linguistics 5.2 (2001): 273-295.
  • Gundel, Jeanette K. "Information structure and referential givenness/newness. How much belongs in the grammar." Journal of Cognitive Science 4.2 (2003): 177-199.
  • Werth, Paul. "Accomodation and the myth of presupposition: The view from discourse." Lingua 89.1 (1993): 39-95.
  • Hardy, Donald E. "Towards a stylistic typology of narrative gaps: knowledge gapping in Flannery O’Connor’s fiction." Language and Literature 14.4 (2005): 363-375.
  • Fludernik, Monika. The fictions of language and the languages of fiction. Routledge, 2003.
    • Manganaro, Thomas Salem. "Free Indirect Discourse and the Problem of the Will in Two Novels by William Godwin." Studies in Romanticism 57.2 (2018): 301-323.
  • Paul, Dawson. "The Return of the Omniscient Narrator: Authorship and Authority in Twenty-First Century Fiction." Ohio: Ohio UP (2013).
  • Caro, Robert A. Working. Vintage, 2020.
  • Fehr, B. (1938). Substitutionary narration and description. English Studies, 20(1-6), 97–107.

  • Kratzer, Angelika, and E. Selkirk. "Deconstructing information structure. Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics, 5 (1), 113." (2020).

  • Manganaro, Thomas Salem. "Free Indirect Discourse and the Problem of the Will in Two Novels by William Godwin." Studies in Romanticism 57.2 (2018): 301-323.

    • Wolff, Phillip, and Grace Song. "Models of causation and the semantics of causal verbs." Cognitive psychology 47.3 (2003): 276-332.
    • Chatman, Seymour. The structure of narrative transmission. na, 1975.
  • Meuser, Sara (2022). How Free is Free Indirect Discourse? Empirical Approaches to the Anchoring Mechanisms of Perspective-taking. PhD thesis, Universität zu Köln.

  • Dry, Helen Aristar. "The Movement of Narrative Time." Journal of Literary Semantics, vol. 12, no. 2, 1983, pp. 19-53.

  • Dry, Helen Aristar, and Susan Kucinkas. "Ghostly Ambiguity: Presuppositional Constructions in" The Turn of the Screw"." Style (1991): 71-88.

  • Jasinskaja, Katja. "Not at issue any more." Ms. University of Cologne (2016).

    • Simons, Mandy, et al. "What projects and why." Semantics and linguistic theory. 2010.
    • Beaver, David, and Henk Zeevat, ' Accommodation', in Gillian Ramchand, and Charles Reiss (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Interfaces (2007; online edn, Oxford Academic, 18 Sept. 2012)
  • Lanyi, Gabriel. "On Narrative Transitions in Nabokov's Prose." PTL: A Journal for Descriptive Poetics and Theory of Literature, vol. 2, 1977, pp. 73–87. North-Holland Publishing Company.

  • Fleischauer, John F. "Simultaneity in Nabokov's Prose Style." Style (1971): 57-69.

  • Grishakova, Marina. The models of space, time and vision in V. Nabokov’s fiction: Narrative strategies and cultural frames. University of Tartu Press, 2012.

  • Rodden, John. "How do stories convince us? Notes towards a rhetoric of narrative." College Literature (2008): 148-173.

  • Koch, David. Authenticating Details. https://www.writingclasses.com/toolbox/articles/authenticating-details [Last accessed: 2024-11-30]

  • https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=Category:English_interjections https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Category:English_lemmas [cf. expressives; Last accessed: 2024-09-23]

  • https://www.reddit.com/r/writing/comments/1fh35i7/a_super_easy_page_one_fix/ [Last accessed: 2024-09-23]

  • Markels, Robin Bell. A new perspective on cohesion in expository paragraphs. SIU Press, 1984.

  • Stainton, Robert. Words and thoughts: Subsentences, ellipsis, and the philosophy of language. Oxford University Press, 2006.

  • Giora, Rachel. "Segmentation and segment cohesion: On the thematic organization of the text."

  • Fahnestock, Jeanne. "Semantic and lexical coherence." College Composition & Communication 34.4 (1983): 400-416.

  • Gold, Jami. "Cause and Effect: Understanding Story Flow" https://jamigold.com/2014/10/cause-and-effect-understanding-story-flow/ [Last accessed: 2024-09-10]

  • Chafe, Wallace. Discourse, consciousness, and time: The flow and displacement of conscious experience in speaking and writing. University of Chicago Press, 1994.

  • Cowley, Katherine. "#33: Use Familiar and Invisible Settings" https://www.katherinecowley.com/jawl/familiar-settings/ [Last accessed: 2024-09-24]

  • https://www.google.com/search?q=theme+determines+setting

  • Terlunen, Milan. All Along…! The Pre-History of the Plot Twist in Nineteenth-Century Fiction. Columbia University, 2022.

  • Philip, Gill, et al. "Negotiating narrative: Dialogic dynamics of known, unknown and believed in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows." Language and Dialogue 3.1 (2013): 7-33.

  • Dry, Helen. "Syntax and Point of View in Jane Austen's" Emma"." Studies in Romanticism (1977): 87-99.

    • Ehrlich, Susan L. Point of View (Routledge Revivals): A Linguistic Analysis of Literary Style. Routledge, 2014.
      • Oltean, S. (1993). A Survey of the Pragmatic and Referential Functions of Free Indirect Discourse. Poetics Today, 14(4), 691.
        • Brinton, L. (1980). “Represented perception”: A study in narrative style. Poetics, 9(4), 363–381.
          • Fehr, B. (1938). Substitutionary narration and description. English Studies, 20(1-6), 97–107.
      • Banfield, Ann. "Reflective and non-reflective consciousness in the language of fiction." Poetics today 2.2 (1981): 61-76.
      • Reinhart, Tanya. "Point of view in language: The use of parentheticals." Essays on deixis 188 (1983): 169-194.
      • Koev, Todor. "Parentheticality, assertion strength, and polarity." Linguistics and Philosophy 44 (2021): 113-140.
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  • Givón, T. (1998). The usual suspects: The grammar of perspective in narrative fiction. University of Oregon Institute of Cognitive and decision sciences: Technical report no. 98-06.

    • Wiebe, Janyce Marbury. Recognizing subjective sentences: a computational investigation of narrative text. State University of New York at Buffalo, 1990.
    • Giora, Rachel. "Segmentation and segment cohesion: On the thematic organization of the text." Text-Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Discourse 3.2 (1983): 155-182.
    • Wiebe, Janyce M. "Tracking point of view in narrative." arXiv preprint cmp-lg/9407019 (1994).
  • Jauss, David. “What We Talk About When We Talk About Flow” On Writing Fiction: Rethinking conventional wisdom about the craft. Penguin, 2011.

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Dowty, David R. Word meaning and Montague grammar: The semantics of verbs and times in generative semantics and in Montague's PTQ. Vol. 7. Springer Science & Business Media, 2012.

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  • McGregor, William B. "Complementation as interpersonal grammar." Word 59.1-2 (2008): 25-53.

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Robert D. Van Valin, Jr. Robert D. A Summary of Role and Reference Grammar [whitepaper]. University at Buffalo, The State University of New York https://www.romanistik.uni-freiburg.de/raible/Lehre/2006/Materialien/RRGsummary.pdf [Last accessed: 2024-05-28]

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cohesion in english

pronouns wikipedia - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=pronouns+wikipedia

determiners wikipedia - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=determiners+wikipedia&oq=determiners+wik&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUqBwgAEAAYgAQyBwgAEAAYgAQyBggBEEUYOTIKCAIQABgPGBYYHjIKCAMQABgPGBYYHjIMCAQQABgKGA8YFhgeMgoIBRAAGA8YFhgeMgoIBhAAGA8YFhgeMgoIBxAAGA8YFhgeMggICBAAGBYYHjINCAkQABiGAxiABBiKBagCALACAA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

pronoun phrases wikipedia - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=pronoun+phrases+wikipedia&oq=pronoun+phrases+wikipedia&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyCwgAEEUYChg5GKABMgcIARAhGJ8FMgcIAhAhGJ8F0gEINjkzMWowajeoAgCwAgA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

English pronouns - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_pronouns#Full_list

List of English determiners - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_determiners

English determiners - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_determiners

Determiner phrase - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determiner_phrase#See_also

Relative pronoun - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_pronoun

"each" versus "each of" versus "each one of" - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q="each"+versus+"each+of"+versus+"each+one+of"&sca_esv=82ff3017660979eb&sxsrf=ACQVn0-BalivnwRUOWyQt4euLqmHOFNshw%3A1707159550506&ei=_i_BZc20HryeptQP5qSs2Ak&ved=0ahUKEwjNq9T08JSEAxU8j4kEHWYSC5sQ4dUDCBA&uact=5&oq="each"+versus+"each+of"+versus+"each+one+of"&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiLCJlYWNoIiB2ZXJzdXMgImVhY2ggb2YiIHZlcnN1cyAiZWFjaCBvbmUgb2YiMgUQIRigATIFECEYoAEyBRAhGKABMgUQIRirAkjpkAFQAFjcjgFwAXgBkAEAmAG8AaABsySqAQUxMC4yN7gBA8gBAPgBAcICCBAAGIAEGKIEwgIIECEYoAEYwwTCAgoQIRgKGKABGMMEwgIGECEYChgKwgIGEAAYFhgewgILEAAYgAQYigUYhgPCAgcQIRgKGKAB4gMEGAAgQQ&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

altogether versus all together wikipedia - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=altogether+versus+all+together+wikipedia&oq=altogether+versus+all+together+wikipedia&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIHCAEQIRifBdIBCTEzMzIxajBqN6gCALACAA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

altogether - Wiktionary, the free dictionary https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/altogether

summative resumptive pronouns adverbs - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=summative+resumptive+pronouns+adverbs&oq=summative+resumptive+pronouns+adverbs&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIHCAEQIRigATIHCAIQIRigAdIBCTIwMDkwajBqN6gCALACAA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

Abstraction 101 https://groups.google.com/g/ontolog-forum/c/P_qNANrRiXg?pli=1

Taxonomy - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxonomy

Mereology - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mereology

Abstraction - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstraction

Metonymy - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metonymy#See_also

metonymy vs synecdoche - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=metonymy+vs+synecdoche&sca_esv=82ff3017660979eb&sxsrf=ACQVn09-PlhwJaELY5Fd9rUmy6Z8VOPV-A%3A1707160342943&ei=FjPBZZqMOcSW5OMP972uOA&oq=meronym+vs+syn&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiDm1lcm9ueW0gdnMgc3luKgIIADINEAAYgAQYDRixAxiDATIHEAAYgAQYDTIHEAAYgAQYDTIHEAAYgAQYDTIHEAAYgAQYDTIHEAAYgAQYDTIGEAAYHhgNMgYQABgeGA0yBhAAGB4YDTIGEAAYHhgNSMo9ULodWLgucAF4AZABAJgBeaAB6QWqAQMyLjW4AQPIAQD4AQHCAgcQIxiwAxgnwgIKEAAYRxjWBBiwA8ICDRAAGIAEGIoFGEMYsAPCAgQQIxgnwgIKEAAYgAQYigUYQ8ICBRAAGIAEwgIHEAAYgAQYCsICCBAAGBYYHhgKwgILEAAYgAQYigUYhgPiAwQYACBBiAYBkAYK&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

meronym and holonym hyponym - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=meronym+and+holonym+hyponym&oq=meronym+and+holonym+hyponym&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIHCAEQIRigATIHCAIQIRigAdIBCTE0MTA5ajBqN6gCALACAA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

Meronymy and holonymy - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meronymy_and_holonymy

Epithet - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epithet#See_also

Sobriquet - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sobriquet

Nickname - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickname

Cleft Sentence: Emphasizing Dog's Happiness https://chat.openai.com/c/95b3101c-480d-4bb6-a435-5ddb01483ce4

Dislocation (syntax) - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dislocation_(syntax)#:~:text=By contrast%2C left dislocation is,is the topic of interest.

Article (grammar) - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article_(grammar)#Zero_article

Apposition - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apposition

is right and left and mediate apposotive dislocation grammatical - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=is+right+and+left+and+mediate+apposotive+dislocation+grammatical&sca_esv=1e966f1761b05aef&sxsrf=ACQVn09LyadApVJxIu7mE0jSROJ79GcMBA%3A1707171969166&ei=gWDBZYbnCauhptQP1sqjqAY&ved=0ahUKEwjGq6uWn5WEAxWrkIkEHVblCGUQ4dUDCBA&uact=5&oq=is+right+and+left+and+mediate+apposotive+dislocation+grammatical&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiQGlzIHJpZ2h0IGFuZCBsZWZ0IGFuZCBtZWRpYXRlIGFwcG9zb3RpdmUgZGlzbG9jYXRpb24gZ3JhbW1hdGljYWxIn1RQ8whYlFJwBngAkAEAmAF6oAG4FqoBBTE4LjExuAEDyAEA-AEBwgIKEAAYRxjWBBiwA8ICBBAjGCfCAggQABiJBRiiBMICCBAAGIAEGKIE4gMEGAAgQYgGAZAGCA&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

Cleft sentence - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleft_sentence

twitter.com/home https://twitter.com/home

grammar of the word thing in the english language - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=grammar+of+the+word+thing+in+the+english+language&sca_esv=1e966f1761b05aef&sxsrf=ACQVn097UoXkVEbw3Um1c6HX66MgqbJ7nw%3A1707172785338&ei=sWPBZaekFNCgptQP0-SkwAM&ved=0ahUKEwjnwMKbopWEAxVQkIkEHVMyCTgQ4dUDCBA&uact=5&oq=grammar+of+the+word+thing+in+the+english+language&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiMWdyYW1tYXIgb2YgdGhlIHdvcmQgdGhpbmcgaW4gdGhlIGVuZ2xpc2ggbGFuZ3VhZ2UyChAAGEcY1gQYsAMyChAAGEcY1gQYsAMyChAAGEcY1gQYsAMyChAAGEcY1gQYsAMyChAAGEcY1gQYsAMyChAAGEcY1gQYsAMyChAAGEcY1gQYsAMyChAAGEcY1gQYsANIw0NQqglYu0JwA3gBkAEAmAEAoAEAqgEAuAEDyAEA-AEB4gMEGAAgQYgGAZAGCA&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

Why is the word 'thing' considered to be a noun instead of a pronoun? It always stands for a noun, doesn't it? - Quora https://www.quora.com/Why-is-the-word-thing-considered-to-be-a-noun-instead-of-a-pronoun-It-always-stands-for-a-noun-doesnt-it

The Grammarphobia Blog: We say the darndest things https://www.grammarphobia.com/blog/2012/07/thing.html

Thing - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thing

thing - Wiktionary, the free dictionary https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/thing#Noun

crux - Wiktionary, the free dictionary https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/crux

(2) Facebook https://www.facebook.com/

ashandarei - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=ashandarei&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

iwot productions | The Wheel of Time Wiki | Fandom https://wheeloftime.fandom.com/wiki/Iwot_productions#:~:text=In 2004%2C Robert Jordan sold,series to Red Eagle Entertainment

Grammarpedia - Dislocation and inversion https://languagetools.info/grammarpedia/dislocation.htm

dislocation vs inversion grammar - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=dislocation+vs+inversion+grammar&sca_esv=1b4e33befbf8976c&sxsrf=ACQVn0-GZHKU6hfYapecXKXaA31mOyv5IQ%3A1707174267351&ei=e2nBZa_XFN-kptQP16uYqAE&ved=0ahUKEwjvgJnep5WEAxVfkokEHdcVBhUQ4dUDCBA&uact=5&oq=dislocation+vs+inversion+grammar&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiIGRpc2xvY2F0aW9uIHZzIGludmVyc2lvbiBncmFtbWFyMgUQIRigATIFECEYoAEyBRAhGKABMgUQIRirAjIFECEYqwJImgtQ4gVY6ApwAXgAkAEAmAH3AaABlwiqAQUxLjUuMbgBA8gBAPgBAcICDhAAGIAEGIoFGIYDGLADwgIFECEYnwXiAwQYASBBiAYBkAYD&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

Inversion (linguistics) - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inversion_(linguistics)

Fronting, Inversion, Dislocation, and Clefting - YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=zn7EyctwsF0

syntax - Difference between dislocation, shifting, inversion, discontinuity, topicalization, scrambling - Linguistics Stack Exchange https://linguistics.stackexchange.com/questions/18832/difference-between-dislocation-shifting-inversion-discontinuity-topicalizati

A preliminary, but fattened, list of transformations.doc.doc https://websites.umich.edu/~jlawler/haj/Preliminarybufattenedlistoftransformations.pdf

Fronting, Inversion, Dislocation, and Clefting wikipedia - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=Fronting%2C+Inversion%2C+Dislocation%2C+and+Clefting+wikipedia&oq=Fronting%2C+Inversion%2C+Dislocation%2C+and+Clefting+wikipedia&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIHCAEQIRigAdIBCDIwODBqMGo3qAIAsAIA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

fronting grammar - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=fronting+grammar&oq=fronting+grammar&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUqBwgAEAAYgAQyBwgAEAAYgAQyBwgBEAAYgAQyBwgCEAAYgAQyBwgDEAAYgAQyCAgEEAAYFhgeMggIBRAAGBYYHjIICAYQABgWGB4yCAgHEAAYFhgeMggICBAAGBYYHjIICAkQABgWGB7SAQg0MDQ4ajBqN6gCALACAA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

Amazon.com : problems in form and function borkin https://www.amazon.com/s?k=problems+in+form+and+function+borkin&crid=H3KFV4MN6JVA&sprefix=problems+in+form+and+function+borki%2Caps%2C119&ref=nb_sb_noss

is "did" a pro-verb - Google Search https://www.google.com/search?q=is+"did"+a+pro-verb&oq=is+"did"+a+pro-verb&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIJCAEQIRgKGKABMgkIAhAhGAoYoAHSAQg0MDA4ajBqNKgCALACAA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

Pro-form - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro-form

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  • Bickham, Jack. Elements of Fiction Writing-Scene & Structure. Penguin, 1999.

  • Hardy, Janice. Understanding Show, Don't Tell (and Really Getting It): Learn how to Find--and Fix--told Prose in Your Writing. Janice Hardy, 2016.

  • Faigin, Gary. The artist's complete guide to facial expression. Watson-Guptill, 2012.

  • Point of View: How to pass the baton of perspective in a short story — A Flash Critique of “The Erlking” by Sarah Shun-Ben — Craft based Analysis of New Yorker Stories — Newwordsmiths' Blog ⁃ https://newwordsmiths.wordpress.com/2010/07/09/point-of-view-how-to-pass-the-baton-of-perspective-in-a-short-story/ [Last accessed: 2023-10-15] ⁃ "The Erlking” by Sarah Shun-Ben Bynum in The New Yorker ⁃ https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/07/05/the-erlking [Last accessed: 2023-10-15]

  • What Do Writers Need to Describe? by Chris Winkle on Mythcreants ⁃ https://mythcreants.com/blog/identifying-what-you-need-to-describe/ [Last accessed: 2023-10-15]

  • Sorensen, Roy A. Thought experiments. Oxford University Press, USA, 1992.

  • Benjamin Opipari, To Boldly Go Without Bold, 16 Perspectives 131 (Winter 2008)

  • George Gopen, George. The ligitation articles. https://www.georgegopen.com/litigation-articles.html [Last accessed: 2025-02-04]

    • Gopen, George D. "The Point of a Paragraph and Where to Find It." Litig. 43 (2016): 15.
    • Gopen, GeorGe D. "What's at Issue: The Construction of the English Paragraph, Part II." Litig. 42 (2015): 16.
    • Gopen, George D. "Five Varieties of Point Placement: The Construction of the English Paragraph, Part V." Litig. 43 (2016): 13.
    • Gopen, George D. "Ensuring readers Know what actions are happening in any sentence." Litig. 38 (2011): 15.
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    • GOPEN, GEORGE D. "THE PROGRESS OF THOUGHT: TO MOVE FORWARD, LINK BACKWARD." Litigation 42.2 (2016): 16-17.
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  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polysyndeton

  • [grammar appendix] It Was the Best of Sentences, It Was the Worst of Sentences: A Writer's Guide to Crafting Killer Sentences by June Casagrande

  • Clear and Coherent Prose: A Functional Approach by William J. Vande Kopple

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  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_NP_shift

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  • Main clauses are innovative, subordinate clauses are conservative Consequences for the nature of constructions Joan Bybee

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  • Salvatore, Joseph. "Tools, Not Rules: Rhetorical Grammar as a Meaning-Making Tool in the Creative Writing Workshop." Journal of Teaching Writing 36.1 (2021): 91-128.

  • Vedin, M. (2002). Adverbials as semantic and pragmatic operators: a functional approach to the analysis of English fiction language (Doctoral dissertation, Luleå tekniska universitet).

  • http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue235/cc_complex_scenes.html and it beats as it sweeps as it cleans

  • virginia tufte artful sentences syntax as style

  • the door dilated Templeton Gate 3.0 - Literature - Robert A. Heinlein_ His Style and Technique.pdf http://templetongate.net/rahstyle.htm

  • germinal

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  • Erwin M. Segal , Judith F. Duchan & Paula J. Scott (1991) The role of interclausal connectives in narrative structuring: Evidence from adults' interpretations of simple stories, Discourse Processes, 14:1, 27-54, DOI: 10.1080/01638539109544773

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  • Relating events in narrative -- Berman, Ruth Aronson; Slobin, Dan Isaac, 1939- editor; -- 1994 -- Hillsdale, N.J._ L. Erlbaum Associates

  • Halliday, Michael Alexander Kirkwood, and Ruqaiya Hasan. Cohesion in english. No. 9. Routledge, 2014. [also the pullum or hiddleston critique/review]

  • A preliminary, but fattened, list of transformations Haj Ross Department of Linguistics and Technical Communication, University of North Texas haj@unt.edu http://www.umich.edu/~jlawler/hajpapers.html http://www.umich.edu/~jlawler/haj/Squibnet/27.VI.2012 ⁃ Transformations – a longer list (refurbished 1.III.2010)

  • Kruijff-Korbayová, Ivana. "Modeling Information Structure for Computational Discourse Processing." Linguistics 19 (2004): 269-300.

  • Kratzer, Angelika, and Elisabeth Selkirk. "Deconstructing information structure." Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 5.1 (2020).

  • Foley, William A. "A typology of information packaging in the clause." Language typology and syntactic description 1 (2007): 362-446.

  • Gregory Ward, Birner B., and Huddleston R. (2002) Information Packaging. In R. Huddleston & G. Pullum (Eds.), The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language (Reprint of 2002 Ed., pp. 1363-1448). Cambridge University Press.

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  • Constantinou, Harris. Intensifiers: Meaning and distribution. Diss. UCL (University College London), 2014.

  • wikipedia intensifier

  • wikipedia discourse marker

  • emphatic pronouns, null pronouns, clitic pronouns, disjunctive pronouns

  • e.g. indeed as non-contrastive focus; information packing, information packaging, information structure, contrastive focus, exhaustive focus

  • own as a disambiguator, cf. ownself, and so on. contrastive focus. cf. only, just, etc.

  • Conte, Maria-Elisabeth, János Sánder Petöfi, and Emel Sözer, eds. Text and Discourse Connectedness: Proceedings of the Conference on Connexity and Coherence, Urbino, July 16 21, 1984. Vol. 16. John Benjamins Publishing, 1989.

  • google list of contrastive focus operators

  • Eckardt, Regine. The semantics of free indirect discourse: How texts allow us to mind-read and eavesdrop. Vol. 31. Brill, 2014.

  • Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. "Evidentials: Their links with other grammatical categories." Linguistic Typology 19.2 (2015): 239-277.

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  • Stokke, Andreas. "Fiction and importation." Linguistics and Philosophy 45.1 (2022): 65-89. ⁃ Stokke, Andreas. "Fictional force." Philosophical Studies 180.10 (2023): 3099-3120. ⁃ Skow, Bradford. "When (imagined) evidence explains fictionality." The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 80.4 (2022): 464-476.

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  • =======

  • How to Write Magical Words: A Writer's Companion Paperback – January 3, 2011 by Edmund R Schubert

  • Revising fiction: A handbook for writers by David Madden

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    • Semino, Elena. & Short, M. "Corpus Stylistics: Speech, Writing and Thought Presentation in a Corpus of English Writing." (2004).
    • Xu Yun, Susan. "Translation of Autobiography." John Benjamins Publishing Company. 2017. ⁃ (relative time and absolute time cf. past-in-past and future-in-past)
  • register ⁃ https://wordsliketrees.wordpress.com/2020/08/16/register/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Germanic_and_Latinate_equivalents_in_Englishhttps://justpublishingadvice.com/control-register-in-your-writing/

  • voice! ⁃ https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/mediopassive-middle-voice-usage-verbshttps://www.rickmor.x10.mx/lexical_semantics.html#S2_7https://blog.oup.com/2019/06/what-is-middle-voice/https://literalminded.wordpress.com/2013/03/04/anti-passive-its-like-a-passive-for-ergative-languages/ ⁃ relationship between sentence fragments, pronouns, voice, and information structure/packaging, and [non-constrastive?] FOCUS ⁃ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impersonal_passive_voice ⁃ ((( https://literalminded.wordpress.com/category/syntax/passive-voice/double-passives/ )))

  • antipassive and telicity ⁃ you speared me vs you speared at me cf. shot the bear (dead) and you shot at the bear. ⁃ Vigus, Meagan. "Antipassive constructions: Correlations of form and function across languages." Linguistic Typology 22.3 (2018): 339-384. ⁃ Say, Sergey. "Antipassive and the lexical meaning of verbs." Antipassive: Typology, diachrony, and related constructions 130 (2021): 177. ⁃ "antipassive" "telicity" ⁃ https://www.newyorker.com/books/this-week-in-fiction/han-kang-02-06-23https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/02/06/the-middle-voice

  • contrastive focus, givenness ⁃ Kratzer, Angelika, and Elisabeth Selkirk. "Deconstructing information structure." Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 5.1 (2020). ⁃ Rochemont, Michael. 2016. Givenness. In Caroline Féry & Shinichiro Ishihara (eds.), The Oxford handbook of information structure, 41–63. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199642670.013.18 ⁃ coreference / entailment ⁃ meronym / holonym ⁃ hypernym / hyponym ⁃ Beck, Sigrid. 2016. Focus sensitive operators. In Caroline Féry & Shinichiro Ishihara (eds.), The Oxford handbook of information structure, 227−250. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ⁃ Herbert H. Clark. 1975. Bridging. In Theoretical Issues in Natural Language Processing. ⁃ Lee, EunHee. "The logic of narratives." The Logic of Narratives. Brill, 2020. ⁃ Basic Concepts in Information Structure: Topic, Focus, and Contrast by Paul Kroeger, Graduate Institu... ⁃ tense and time in counterfactual conditionals ⁃ On how to interpret canonical conditionals in discourse RENAAT DECLERCK

  • hope ⁃ https://www.ericjamesstone.com/biography/about-writing/my-notes-from-orson-scott-cards-literary-boot-camp-2003/ ⁃ science of science fiction james gun (hope)

  • bridging ⁃ (Lee, EunHee. "The logic of narratives." The Logic of Narratives. Brill, 2020.) ⁃ bridging clark 1975 1977 ⁃ Why is discourse coherent? 1978 1979 Hobbs ⁃ bos et all 1995 bridging as coercive accomodation ⁃ Temporal Interpretation, Discourse Relations and Commonsense Entailment Author(s): Alex Lascarides and Nicholas Asher Source: Linguistics and Philosophy, Vol. 16, No. 5 (Oct., 1993), pp. 437-493 ⁃ Lascarides, A & Asher, N 1991, Discourse relations and defeasible knowledge. in Proceedings of the 29th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics. ACL '91, Association for Computational Linguistics, Stroudsburg, PA, USA, pp. 55-62. https://doi.org/10.3115/981344.981352 ⁃ [...] ⁃ voice and implicature fiction writing ⁃ https://www.livewritethrive.com/2023/01/09/the-intersection-of-voice-and-deep-pov/https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/518401/when-to-use-semicolon-and-comma-in-a-list-of-clauses ⁃ Elizabeth George inspector L person

  • (pretty bad? but later books maybe better plus indexes a lot of stuff?)Story Logic: Problems and Possibilities of Narrative (Frontiers of Narrative) Paperback – June 1, 2004 by David Herman ⁃ (same re badness or etc.) THE CINEMATIC NARRATOR: THE LOGIC AND PRAGMATICS OF IMPERSONAL NARRATION ROBERT BURGOYNE ⁃ The Logic of Narrative Possibilities Claude Bremond and Elaine D. Cancalon

  • Narrative possibility and narrative explanation John Beatty

  • key: ⁃* https://hal.science/ijn_03010587/document The spectrum of perspective shift: protagonist projection versus free indirect discourse Marta Abrusan [add others from apple notes] and then the ⁃ Banfield reflective and non-reflective consciousness. 1981

  • Rick Morneau Lexical Semantics of a Machine Translation Interlingua

  • cf. "evidential" "parentheticals" in english "tail" OR "tail-end"; e.g. _,_she knew. ⁃ parenthetical modality OR epistemic OR evidential tail OR tail-end ⁃*****The grammaticalization of evidentiality in English E Melac ⁃*****Murray, Sarah E. "Varieties of update." Semantics and Pragmatics 7 (2014): 2-1. ⁃ The Comment Clause in English: Syntactic Origins and Pragmatic Development (Studies in English Language) Part of: Studies in English Language (59 books) | by Laurel J. Brinton ⁃ Type Chapter: Parentheticals in Spoken English The Syntax-Prosody Relation , pp. 18 - 86 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139032391.002 Publisher: Cambridge University Press Print publication year: 2014

  • cataphor etc. cataphoric pronouns in "narrative" -"indefinite this" ⁃ TEXTUAL ELEMENTS AND GRAMMATICAL COHESION IN A CAT IN THE RAIN BY HEMINGWAY Year 2022, Issue: 29, 98 - 121, 28.02.2022 Ozan Deniz Yalçınkaya ⁃ 5 Pronouns of Address and ‘Odd’ Third Person Forms: The Mechanics of Involvement in Fiction In: New Essays in Deixis Author: Monika Fludernik ⁃ ANAPHORIC AND CATAPHORIC REFERENCES USED IN THE CHAPEL SHORT STORY Authors Ana Shofiana Jamilah Universitas Duta Bangsa Surakarta Agnes Larasati Universitas Duta Bangsa Surakarta Luthfi Nasiroh Khoirun Nisa Universitas Duta Bangsa Surakarta DOI: https://doi.org/10.47701/frasa.v4i2.2910 ⁃ Narrating the unspeakable. Person marking and focalization in Nabokov's short story ‘Signs and Symbols’ Sophie Levie EMAIL logo and Puck Wildschut ⁃ https://www.myenglishpages.com/writing-cataphora/

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  • Schwarz-Friesel, Monika. "Indirect anaphora in text: A cognitive account." Anaphors in text: Cognitive, formal and applied approaches to anaphoric reference. John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2008. 3-20.

  • Löbner, Sebastian. "Definite associative anaphora." manuscript) 1998.

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