fyllingu
Fyllingu is a term coined in contemporary discourse studies to designate the repertoire of fillers, hesitations, and boundary-marking devices that speakers deploy to manage turn-taking and negotiate meaning in spontaneous speech. It encompasses phonetic fillers such as uh and um, lexical fillers like you know or I mean, and discourse markers that perform pragmatic functions.
The concept emphasizes cross-linguistic and cross-register variation, noting that languages differ in tolerance for pauses and
Researchers analyze large speech corpora, dialogue transcripts, and real-time conversations to identify patterns of fyllingu usage.
The term remains modestly used and is not yet standardized across the field. It reflects an attempt
Related concepts include discourse markers, filler words, hesitation phenomena, and turn-taking cues.