Functional Sentence Perspective in Written and Spoken Communication
Inspired by the ideas of the Prague School, the theory of functional sentence perspective (FSP) is concerned with the distribution of information as determined by all meaningful elements, from intonation (for speech) to context. A central feature of FSP is communicative dynamism. Jan Firbas discusses the distribution of the degrees of communicative dynamism over sentence elements, which determines the orientation or perspective of the sentence. He examines also the relation of theme and rheme to, and implementation by, syntactic components. Special attention is paid to the relation between FSP and word order. The second part of the book deals with spoken communication and considers the place of intonation in the interplay of FSP factors, establishing the concept of prosodic prominence. It tackles the relationship between the distribution of degrees of communicative dynamism as determined by the interplay of the non-prosodic FSP factors and the distribution of degrees of prosodic prominence as brought about by intonation.
Erle Elsworth Clippinger's 'Written and Spoken English' is a comprehensive course in composition and rhetoric for students of English as a second language. Book 1 covers the basics of grammar,...
""Studies In English, Written And Spoken: For The Use Of Continental Students"" is a book written by Cornelis Stoffel, first published in 1894. The book is designed to help non-native English...