Peter Barrios-Lech is Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Besides teaching Latin and Greek, and courses in Greek and Roman civilization, he co-directs the Conventiculum Bostoniense, a week-length program in spoken Latin which attracts graduate students, professors, high-school students and Latin enthusiasts from around the country. He has published articles on the language of Plautus and Terence and is currently working on a book on Greek New Comedy.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction Part I. The Latin Directive: Introduction to Part I 2. The moods of command - imperatives and subjunctives 3. Prohibitions in Early Latin 4. Indirect requests - questions and statements 5. The 'can you' request and others Conclusion to Part I Part II. Interactional Particles in Roman Comedy: 6. How to soften a command 7. How to strengthen a command 8. How to soften a statement in Latin Part III. Structuring Conversation: 9. Interruptions and attention-getters 10. Openings and closings in Roman comedy Conclusion to Parts I-III: summary of findings Part IV. Interpreting Interactions in Roman Comedy: 11. Discourse in Roman comedy 12. Role shifts, speech shifts Appendix 1. Speech and character types in Roman comedy Appendix 2. About the directive database Appendix 3. Politeness phenomena in Roman comedy.
1. Introduction Part I. The Latin Directive: Introduction to Part I 2. The moods of command - imperatives and subjunctives 3. Prohibitions in Early Latin 4. Indirect requests - questions and statements 5. The 'can you' request and others Conclusion to Part I Part II. Interactional Particles in Roman Comedy: 6. How to soften a command 7. How to strengthen a command 8. How to soften a statement in Latin Part III. Structuring Conversation: 9. Interruptions and attention-getters 10. Openings and closings in Roman comedy Conclusion to Parts I-III: summary of findings Part IV. Interpreting Interactions in Roman Comedy: 11. Discourse in Roman comedy 12. Role shifts, speech shifts Appendix 1. Speech and character types in Roman comedy Appendix 2. About the directive database Appendix 3. Politeness phenomena in Roman comedy.
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