1.Introduction When addressing language cohesion,an attempt must be made to identify how language is used to create cohesive and coherent communication,or how one utterance follows another.William Labov describes the ...1.Introduction When addressing language cohesion,an attempt must be made to identify how language is used to create cohesive and coherent communication,or how one utterance follows another.William Labov describes the task at hand,stating that‘the fundamental problem of discourse analysis1is to show how one utterance follows another in a rational,rule governed manner—in other words,how展开更多
1.Introduction*The administrative title‘scribe of the necropolis’(sS n p#Xr1)is a well-known and well-studied aspect of New Kingdom scholarship.2 For the duration of the royal necropolis at Thebes(1550–1069 BCE.),t...1.Introduction*The administrative title‘scribe of the necropolis’(sS n p#Xr1)is a well-known and well-studied aspect of New Kingdom scholarship.2 For the duration of the royal necropolis at Thebes(1550–1069 BCE.),today known as the Valley of the Kings,the scribe of the necropolis was responsible for keeping daily accounts of the work undertaken at the site,and supplying and distributing rations for the general workforce.Other duties are also documented including the delivery of goods and supplies to the village of Deir el-Medina,home of the necropolis workers and their families.3 Throughout the almost four-hundred year period of activity at the Theban Necropolis during the New Kingdom,the official records are full of references to scribes in various contexts.展开更多
文摘1.Introduction When addressing language cohesion,an attempt must be made to identify how language is used to create cohesive and coherent communication,or how one utterance follows another.William Labov describes the task at hand,stating that‘the fundamental problem of discourse analysis1is to show how one utterance follows another in a rational,rule governed manner—in other words,how
文摘1.Introduction*The administrative title‘scribe of the necropolis’(sS n p#Xr1)is a well-known and well-studied aspect of New Kingdom scholarship.2 For the duration of the royal necropolis at Thebes(1550–1069 BCE.),today known as the Valley of the Kings,the scribe of the necropolis was responsible for keeping daily accounts of the work undertaken at the site,and supplying and distributing rations for the general workforce.Other duties are also documented including the delivery of goods and supplies to the village of Deir el-Medina,home of the necropolis workers and their families.3 Throughout the almost four-hundred year period of activity at the Theban Necropolis during the New Kingdom,the official records are full of references to scribes in various contexts.