@article{oai:hokuriku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000315, author = {轟, 里香 and Todoroki, Rika}, issue = {38}, journal = {北陸大学紀要, Bulletin of Hokuriku University}, month = {Dec}, note = {This paper is an analysis of sentences which appear in Japanese TV news programs. A lot of sentences used in news programs lack important information. Some of those sentences do not have their predicates. Others lack one or more arguments to which the verb needs to assign θ-roles and thus violate syntactic rules. In some cases, the first sentence of one news story lacks important information, which is revealed in the following context gradually. In other words, some of the most important points are moved rightward in the discourse. This paper examines the linguistic phenomena and how the missing information is revealed in the news stories. I show that various forms of signs (spoken and written words, aural and visual images, etc.) are used to reveal the missing information in the context. Furthermore, I refer to an example in 1970s and try to show how the linguistic phenomena developed. In the earlier case, the first sentence has all the grammatically required elements but does not state the theme of the story. Starting with cases like this, the linguistic phenomena (moving important points rightward) seem to have developed and led to sentences which lack grammatically required elements.}, pages = {81--97}, title = {テレビニュースにおける言語現象について}, year = {2014}, yomi = {トドロキ, リカ} }