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意見陳述の終結部における聞き手の言語行動 -韓国語を母語とする日本語非母語話者の 日本語熟達度による比較から-Listeners’ linguistic behaviors in the closings of opinion statements -Comparison of the behaviors based on the korean non-native speakers’ proficiency in Japanese-

Other Titles
Listeners’ linguistic behaviors in the closings of opinion statements -Comparison of the behaviors based on the korean non-native speakers’ proficiency in Japanese-
Authors
Komatsu Nana
Issue Date
2020
Publisher
한국일본언어문화학회
Keywords
意見陳述(opinion statements); 終結部(closing); 聞き手(listener); 反応(response); 熟達度(proficiency); opinion statements; closing; listener; response; proficiency
Citation
일본언어문화, no.53, pp.29 - 48
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
일본언어문화
Number
53
Start Page
29
End Page
48
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/130919
ISSN
1598-9585
Abstract
In this study, I investigated how listeners respond to the opinion statements in the conversational closings. I analyzed the Japanese conversation of opinion exchange in contact situations to make a comparison of the behavioral features between the advanced- and intermediate-level Japanese speakers. Based on if there were the listeners’ responses to the opinion statements and if the listeners took speaking turns or the speakers held speaking turns right after the closings, the conversational closings have the following four types, “response – turn-taking”, “no response – turn-taking”, “response – turn-holding” and “no response – turn-holding”. Frequency of those four types was used for the comparison. The results showed that the frequency of “response – turn-taking” was the highest in the contact situations by the conversational participants including the advanced-level Japanese speakers. The participants most commonly took speaking turns after responding to the conversational partners’ opinion statements in the closings. By contrast, the frequency of “no response – turn-taking” was the highest in the contact situations by the participants including the intermediate-level speakers. The behavioral feature was that the participants took speaking turns without responding to the conversational partners’ opinion statements. The results revealed that non-native Japanese speakers apparently have such tendency.
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