Ôn tập Diễn Ngôn-DA
Ôn tập Diễn Ngôn-DA
Ôn tập Diễn Ngôn-DA
CHAPTER 2
Grammatical cohesion: Grammatical cohesion refers to the linguistic
structure of the text. The structure determines the order in which grammatical
elements occur, and they way they are related within a sentence.
Grammatical cohesion is the relation of grammatical elements that include
references, substitutions, ellipsis and conjunctions
1. Reference concerns the grammatical relations between a discourse element
and a preceding or following element.
Reference may either be exophoric or endophoric according to directions
Exophoric reference requires the reader to infer the interpreted referent
by looking beyond the text in the immediate environment shared by the
reader and writer. For example in the sentence: That is a wonderful idea.
To retrieve the meaning of “that”, the reader must look outside the
situation.
Endophoric reference lies within the text itself. It refers to something intra-
linguistics. For example in the sentence: I saw Sally yesterday. She was
lying on the beach
Here, she refers to Sally. So she is an endophoric expression because it
refers to something already mentioned in the text.
Endophora is classified into two classes: Anaphora and cataphora
Anaphoric reference is where a word or phrase refers back to
another word or phrase used earlier in the text.
For example in the sentence: Amy went to the party. She sat with
Sara. She refers back to Amy; therefore, she is an anaphoric
reference
Cataphoric reference looks forward to another word or phrase
mentioned later in the text.
For example in the sentence: As soon as he arrived, Mike visited
his parents. He is a cataphoric reference that looks forward to
Mike.
Types of reference
- Personal preference: She, he, it, you, his, her…
- Demonstrative reference: here, there, now, then….
- Comparative reference: It’s the same cat as the one we saw
yesterday. In the sentence, the same is comparative reference