This video lecture is a part of the course 'An Introduction to English Linguistics' at the University of Neuchâtel. This is session 13, in which I discuss the study of spoken conversation.
Mr. Hilpert, I really want to thank you for uploading these videos. I've been learning from you since I was in my home country in Asia, and now I have been accepted to a master's program in Switzerland and have started the first semester. I happened to notice that you are also teaching in Switzerland after I arrived here. It is interesting that I feel like you led me to this place and this amazing academic field. Again, thank you so much, sir.
Your videos are incredibly helpful due to the right mix between academic content and appealing presentation. The way you break concepts down to explain them makes it easy to grasp even comprehensive subjects. Thank you for that!
An excellent instructive video. None native English speakers should follow such awesome courses on RU-vid to boost the quality of their skills. A friend introduced this course to me, and I found it significantly useful. to improve my errors with speaking in English. Regards, H. Rasouli, Iran
Thanks a million for summarising all the main points of CA in a single video! Would you be so kind as to share other resources where one can easily get the audio and transcripts of naturally occurred talk? Many thanks in advance!
Thank you for your video, I am currently writing an essay on conversation analysis and I wondered if you had any references for some of the terms you use, such as 'continuation signal' as one of my participants says 'uh' in an attempt to hold the floor. Also the terms 'self-select' and 'other-select' as I need to reference these in my essay. Thank you in advance
i am a TBİ survivor amd i misunderstand every thing and every one reality to me is not structured but it is a hazy mass of words and actions i understnd only very very crudly child like