Home

hesitéis

Hesitéis is a term used in some linguistics and cognitive science discussions to describe a cross-linguistic category of hesitation phenomena. It refers to the expressions of uncertainty, delay, and deliberation that occur in spoken language and social interaction. The term is not standard terminology but is used as a working label in theoretical discussions and comparative studies.

Etymology and scope: Hesitéis blends the French hésitation with a Greek plural suffix -eis, signaling its intended

Classification and function: Some researchers distinguish subtypes such as speech hesitations (disfluencies like um and er),

Measurement and applications: Researchers may quantify hesitéis via pause duration, filler word frequency, reaction times, pitch

Limitations: Hesitéis is not a standardized term; it may overlap with established concepts such as disfluency

See also: Hesitation, Disfluency, Hesitation marker, Speech disfluency, Pragmatics.

cross-linguistic
reach.
In
practice,
it
covers
a
range
of
features
that
signal
hesitation,
including
linguistic
signals
such
as
fillers
and
elongated
pauses,
as
well
as
nonverbal
cues
like
gaze
and
body
language
that
accompany
uncertain
speech.
cognitive
hesitations
(deliberation
or
processing
delays),
and
social
hesitations
(face-saving
or
politeness
strategies).
Hesitéis
can
serve
to
buy
time,
invite
clarification,
or
manage
interpersonal
dynamics.
variation,
and
gaze
patterns.
The
concept
informs
studies
in
dialogue
systems
and
human-computer
interaction,
as
well
as
literary
or
media
analyses
that
describe
character
behavior
or
conversational
dynamics.
and
hesitation
markers.
Its
use
varies
by
field,
and
practitioners
often
prefer
conventional
terms
depending
on
the
specific
research
question.