Conversation and Preference Version en ligne Pragmatics Conversation and Preference Sturcture par Angela Maria Sarmiento Camelo 1 In conversation analysis, it is composed of two turns produced by different speakers. The second utterance is identified as related to the first, as exhibited in conventional greetings, invitations, and requests. a Overlap b Turn-taking c Adjacency pair d Floor 2 The current right to speak in a conversation. a Adjacency pair b Floor c Backchannels d High considerateness style 3 The change of speaker during conversation. a Adjacency pair b Floor c Turn-taking d Overlap 4 More than one speaker talking at the same time in conversation. a Overlap b Backchannels c High considerateness style d High involvement style e Overlap f Backchannels 5 Vocal indications of attention when someone else is talking. Example: ‘uh-huh’, ‘hmm’ a Backchannels b High considerateness style c High involvement style d Preference structure 6 A non- interrupting, non-imposing way of taking part in a conversation. a High involvement style b High considerateness style c Preference structure d Dispreferred 7 An active, fast-paced, overlapping way of taking part in conversation. a High involvement style b High considerateness style c Preference structure d Dispreferred 8 A pattern in which one type of utterance will be more typically found in response to another in a conversational sequence. Example: an acceptance will more typically follow an invitation than a refusal. a Preference structure b Dispreferred c High involvement style d Backchannels 9 The structurally unexpected next utterance as a response. Example: an invitation is normally followed by an acceptance, so the opposite is a refusal. a Dispreferred b Preference structure c High involvement style d High considerateness style