smhttiki wrote:hello, I am a linguist working on Scottish English, and more esp. on sentence-final connectives such as 'but', 'so, and 'then'. I would highly appreciate your help in the following.
What does sentence-final 'but' mean? Does it refer to a contrast? Can you paraphrase it by 'though'? Or is just a way of saying 'indeed'/'really'? Can sentence-final 'but' be preceded by a comma, that is a pause in speech? If so, is it the same meaning as the one which is not preceded by a comma?
The same questions apply to 'so' and 'then'.
Thanks for your feedback
Cheers
sylh
Hi there
I think "but" at the end is used for contrast:
"My parents are away on holiday tomorrow. I'm no' going but". I think it's similar to "though". No idea if there should be a comma.
I'm not sure what you mean by "so", unless it's:
"You're no goin' oot the night." "I am so". It's emphatic. It's like the "Oh, yes I am" of the pantomime.
Or perhaps you mean:
"I'm goin' tae Florida next week, so I am"
"Her new boyfriend's really nice, so he is".
The end tag is giving some importance to a fact or opinion.
As for "then", I can't think of how we use it differently than in Standard English. I thought everyone would use the following:
"Is that you ready to go, then?"
"I see you're moving house, then?"
It seems that it's a question, or turns a statement into a question, especially where the answer is already evident and the expected answer is positive.
I've never thought about markers for interruption before. That's very interesting.
My area is West Central Scotland. It would be really interesting to see what others from different areas and different dialects have to say.
Good Luck with your research!