@article{xu-2021-analysis,
title = "An Analysis of {J}apanese Sentence-final Particle Yone: Compare Yone and Ne in Response",
author = "Xu, Jun",
editor = "Healey, Patrick and
Eugenio, Barbara Di and
Demberg, Vera and
Ginzburg, Jonathan and
Georgila, Kallirroi and
Zeldes, Amir and
Poesio, Massimo",
journal = "Dialogue {\&} Discourse",
volume = "12",
month = dec,
year = "2021",
address = "Chicago, Illinois, USA",
publisher = "University of Illinois Chicago",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/transition-to-json/2021.dnd-12.2/",
doi = "10.5210/dad.2021.206",
pages = "174--191",
abstract = "Yone, a Japanese sentence-final particle (SFP), is frequently used in conversation, and some functions overlap with ne, another SFP. However, not much discussion has taken place about their differences. This study argues that the two Japanese sentence-final particles, yone and ne, express a distinction about the speaker{'}s state of mind: yone indicates that an idea has been on the speaker{'}s mind, while ne suggests a thought just emerged into the speaker{'}s awareness. Naturally occurring conversation data provides evidence for this claim. The results show that the particles reflect the speaker{'}s choice of presenting his/her state of awareness."
}Markdown (Informal)
[An Analysis of Japanese Sentence-final Particle Yone: Compare Yone and Ne in Response](https://preview.aclanthology.org/transition-to-json/2021.dnd-12.2/) (Xu, DND 2021)
ACL