The Dutch, German and French languages display a variety of regularly used connectives all of which introduce causes, arguments or reasons, such as Dutch omdat, want and aangezien, German weil, denn and da, and French parce que, car and puisque. Why should these languages have different connectives to express the notion of backward causality? The central argument developed in this article is that the use of these connectives is dependent on the degree of subjectivity associated with the causal relation. The pre-eminence of this account with respect to prior accounts of the uses of these connectives is established on the basis of a series of corpus analyses. The outcomes show that the degree of subjectivity of the main participant involved in the causal relation strongly predicts the occurrence of one or another connective. A distinction can be made between objective connectives like omdat and doordat, parce que and weil on the one hand and subjective connectives like want and aangezien, car and puisque and denn and da on the other hand. No differences between the subjective connectives aangezien/want, puisque/car and denn/da could be observed in terms of subjectivity, but additional frequency data and analyses of translation practices revealed promising directions for supplementary explanations.
2023. A multi-method approach to estimating subjectivity of causal connectives: The case of ‘poetomu’ and ‘tak chto’ in Russian. Lingua 288 ► pp. 103524 ff.
Wetzel, Mathis, Ekaterina Tskhovrebova, Pascal M. Gygax & Sandrine Zufferey
2023. Pragmatic and syntactic constraints on French causal connectives: An evaluation of native and non-native speakers’ sensitivity. Journal of Pragmatics 209 ► pp. 89 ff.
Xu, Jiajin & Hui Kang
2022. Salience-simplification strategy for markedness of causal subordinators: “Because” and “since” in argumentative essays. Lingua 272 ► pp. 103256 ff.
2021. Unifying dimensions in coherence relations: How various annotation frameworks are related. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory 17:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
2020. What type of subjectivity lies behind French causal connectives? A corpus-based comparative investigation of <i>car</i> and <i>parce que</i>. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 5:1
Wetzel, Mathis, Sandrine Zufferey & Pascal Gygax
2020. Second Language Acquisition and the Mastery of Discourse Connectives: Assessing the Factors That Hinder L2-Learners from Mastering French Connectives. Languages 5:3 ► pp. 35 ff.
Schumann, Jennifer, Sandrine Zufferey & Steve Oswald
2019. What makes a straw man acceptable? Three experiments assessing linguistic factors. Journal of Pragmatics 141 ► pp. 1 ff.
Schumann, Jennifer, Sandrine Zufferey & Steve Oswald
2021. The Linguistic Formulation of Fallacies Matters: The Case of Causal Connectives. Argumentation 35:3 ► pp. 361 ff.
Grisot, Cristina
2018. Tense, Grammatical Aspect and Subjectivity: An Experimental Study Using Inter-Annotator Agreement Rates and Corpus-Based Data. Corpus Pragmatics 2:1 ► pp. 27 ff.
ZUFFEREY, SANDRINE, WILLEM MAK, SARA VERBRUGGE & TED SANDERS
2018. Usage and processing of the French causal connectives ‘car’ and ‘parce que’. Journal of French Language Studies 28:1 ► pp. 85 ff.
2014. Dialogical history of a logical fallacy spontaneously produced during a predictive medicine consultation. Role of the causal connective Puisque in a discussion. Journal of Pragmatics 61 ► pp. 120 ff.
Degand, Liesbeth & Benjamin Fagard
2012. Competing connectives in the causal domain. Journal of Pragmatics 44:2 ► pp. 154 ff.
Deulofeu, Henri-José & Jeanne-Marie Debaisieux
2012. Une tâche à accomplir pour la linguistique française du XXI e siècle : élaborer une grammaire des usages du français. Langue française n°176:4 ► pp. 27 ff.
Stukker, Ninke & Ted Sanders
2012. Subjectivity and prototype structure in causal connectives: A cross-linguistic perspective. Journal of Pragmatics 44:2 ► pp. 169 ff.
Zufferey, Sandrine
2012. “Car, parce que, puisque” revisited: Three empirical studies on French causal connectives. Journal of Pragmatics 44:2 ► pp. 138 ff.
Zufferey, Sandrine
2014. Givenness, procedural meaning and connectives. The case of French puisque. Journal of Pragmatics 62 ► pp. 121 ff.
Goethals, Patrick
2010. A multi-layered approach to speech events. Journal of Pragmatics 42:8 ► pp. 2204 ff.
[no author supplied]
2020. References. In Introduction to Corpus Linguistics, ► pp. 233 ff.
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