Cohesive Devices
Cohesive Devices
Cohesive Devices
Introduction:
• What makes a text cohere?
Cohesion:
The grammatical and lexical relationship between different
elements of a text which hold it together.
Coherence :
• a semantic property of discourse formed through the
interpretation of each individual sentence relative to
the interpretation of other sentences, with
"interpretation" implying interaction between the text,
the reader and the writer.
• a property that a reader will discern in the text
• allows the reader to make sense of the text
• refers to the semantic unity created between the ideas,
sentences, paragraphs and sections of a piece of
writing.
Coherence vs. Cohesion
Coherence: Cohesion:
• very general principle of • formal linguistic features
interpretation of language in e.g repetition,reference
context • semantic relationships
• fewer formal linguistic between sentences and
features within sentences
• determined by lexically and
e.g vocabulary choice grammatically overt
• relationships deal with text intersentential relationships
as a whole
• based on primarily semantic more recognizable
relationships
errors much more
obvious
Is it coherent or not?
• The ancient Egyptians were masters of preserving dead people's
bodies by making mummies of them. Mummies several
thousand years old have been discovered nearly intact. The
skin, hair, teeth, fingernails and toenails, and facial features of
the mummies were evident. It is possible to diagnose the
disease they suffered in life, such as smallpox, arthritis, and
nutritional deficiencies. The process was remarkably effective.
Sometimes apparent were the fatal afflictions of the dead
people: a middle-aged king died from a blow on the head, and
polio killed a child king. Mummification consisted of removing
the internal organs, applying natural preservatives inside and
out, and then wrapping the body in layers of bandages.
Below is the same paragraph revised for coherence. Italics indicates pronouns and repeated
key words, bold indicates transitional tag-words, and underlining indicates parallel
structures.
• The ancient Egyptians were masters of preserving dead
people's bodies by making mummies of them. In short,
mummification consisted of removing the internal organs,
applying natural preservatives inside and out, and then
wrapping the body in layers of bandages. And the process was
remarkably effective. Indeed, mummies several thousand years
old have been discovered nearly intact. Their skin, hair, teeth,
fingernails and toenails, and facial features are still evident.
Their diseases in life, such as smallpox, arthritis, and nutritional
deficiencies, are still diagnosable. Even their fatal afflictions
are still apparent: a middle-aged king died from a blow on the
head; a child king died from polio.
According to Halliday & Hasan,
• Reference
• Ellipsis
• Substitution
Grammatical
• Conjunction
Cohesion
• Lexical Cohesion
Halliday & Hasan's Taxonomy of Cohesive Devices :
• Reference :
Replacement of words and expressions with pro-forms.
e.g pronouns,pro-modifiers.
expressing purpose
so that
in order that
Prepositions because of due to in order to
Conjunctive adverbs therefore consequently
and transitions
Conjunctions so
LOGICAL CONNECTORS
Adversative (unexpected result, contrast, opposition)
Rule: If the subject of the adverb clause and the main clause are
the same, the adverb clause may be reduced.