A B S T R A C TThis article examines the use of English discourse markers in Louisiana French, focusing in particular on English but and its French counterpart mais. Based on data collected in Terrebonne and Lafourche Parishes, we examine the speech of bilinguals to determine the status of these markers, which provide a window onto the role of discourse markers in situations of language contact. Though the markers show an overlapping semantic and functional distribution, but more often appears in the context of at least one pause. We also provide acoustic evidence and an analysis of the markers in different functions to conclude that the need for iconic contrast via language mixing (Maschler 1994(Maschler , 1997de Rooij 2000) is only one possible motivation for the use of foreign markers. We conclude that discourse markers may carry social meaning and be the site of identity construction as much as they are the site of text organization. (Discourse markers, bilingual discourse, codeswitching, language shift)* "I get by in life, French or English, mais that's alright"
I N T R O D U C T I O NIn this article, we examine use of English discourse markers in Louisiana Regional French (LRF) to determine the linguistic and extralinguistic motivations for the use of codeswitched markers in situations of language contact, and to better understand the nature of discourse markers themselves. In particular, we bring new acoustic evidence to the debate, and we examine the phenomenon using data from a situation of language shift and cultural revival rather than one of stable diglossia or simple