Publication Details
Abstract
This paper investigates the pragmatic functions of appositive constituents in text, focusing on their potential as fundamental means for managing information and guiding readers. Although traditional linguistics usually considers appositive constructions merely to be syntactic appendices, this part of the research fills an existing gap in knowledge by bringing together morphosyntactic structures and their functional-discourse properties. The present study deploys a qualitative and contrastive discourse analysis approach to investigate how appositives act as adjuncts to facilitate perspective change via at-issue vs. non-at-issue information in meta-discursive signaling. Further, their analysis shows how appositive relations function as informational anchors that writers can use to impose additional meanings (here termed ‘appositive impositions’) onto a text or other data without them disrupting the narrative flow. First, these results show that appositives are strategically utilized to foreground persuasion, clarity and communicative intent in multiple genres such as journalistic and literary texts. In summary, the findings suggest that a use-oriented approach to apposition increases the quality of text production and translation tremendously and offers a more comprehensive framework for understanding how syntax interacts with speaker orientation within contemporary linguistic research.