Grice: “Meaning”
... something by the utterance of a sentence as being only a special case of meaning something by an utterance” (p. 161). In other words, conventional meaning (“sentence meaning”) is to be analyzed in terms of speaker’s meaning, and not the other way around. And this refusal is crucial for Grice—if he a ...
... something by the utterance of a sentence as being only a special case of meaning something by an utterance” (p. 161). In other words, conventional meaning (“sentence meaning”) is to be analyzed in terms of speaker’s meaning, and not the other way around. And this refusal is crucial for Grice—if he a ...
Language in Context
... I shall try to substantiate some of the claims I have been making by looking at examples. We all know, or at least know of, languages that employ honorifics as essential elements in sentences. Sometimes they occur with personal names, and in these cases it is fairly easy to see what is going on: one ...
... I shall try to substantiate some of the claims I have been making by looking at examples. We all know, or at least know of, languages that employ honorifics as essential elements in sentences. Sometimes they occur with personal names, and in these cases it is fairly easy to see what is going on: one ...
Document
... What are eie Stem Changing Verbs? Stem changing verbs, also known as “boot” or “shoe” verbs, are verbs that have a change of a vowel when conjugated. This vowel change occurs in all the forms except the nosotros and vosotros form. For example, in the verb pensar, the e changes to an ie in all the f ...
... What are eie Stem Changing Verbs? Stem changing verbs, also known as “boot” or “shoe” verbs, are verbs that have a change of a vowel when conjugated. This vowel change occurs in all the forms except the nosotros and vosotros form. For example, in the verb pensar, the e changes to an ie in all the f ...
Prosody
... Present in both acquired and developmental speech and language disorders (mentioned above) The interaction between the different aspects of prosody. ...
... Present in both acquired and developmental speech and language disorders (mentioned above) The interaction between the different aspects of prosody. ...
Grammars, Words, and Embodied Meanings: On the Uses and
... They’re like “Stick this card into this machine and . . . .” In combination with something, like can be used to append various kinds of components to units of talk, as Examples 9 and 10 illustrate. Example 9. or something like that Example 10. something like “Now it’s finally over.” Each time, then, ...
... They’re like “Stick this card into this machine and . . . .” In combination with something, like can be used to append various kinds of components to units of talk, as Examples 9 and 10 illustrate. Example 9. or something like that Example 10. something like “Now it’s finally over.” Each time, then, ...
Annotating Honorifics Denoting Social Ranking of Referents
... view point of resolving zero pronouns in dialogues by Dohsaka (1990). Of these, the most thorough work on Japanese honorification is seen in JACY, a Japanese HPSG grammar (Siegel 2000, Siegel and Bender 2002). It extends the BACKGR (owe – honour) relation (Pollard and Sag 1994), which accounts only ...
... view point of resolving zero pronouns in dialogues by Dohsaka (1990). Of these, the most thorough work on Japanese honorification is seen in JACY, a Japanese HPSG grammar (Siegel 2000, Siegel and Bender 2002). It extends the BACKGR (owe – honour) relation (Pollard and Sag 1994), which accounts only ...
LIN1280 Pragmatics I
... Other IFIDs are less explicit (but still well understood by a listener) Examples include intonation, stress and word order: It’s me you’ll hear from You’ll hear from me! ...
... Other IFIDs are less explicit (but still well understood by a listener) Examples include intonation, stress and word order: It’s me you’ll hear from You’ll hear from me! ...
CHAPTER FOUR CONCLUSION
... not want to make the United States regarded as an unethical nation which aggressively attacks another nation. This speech convinces the world that what the United States does is something good. The analysis of interpersonal meaning can be divided into two analyses, namely the analysis of mood and th ...
... not want to make the United States regarded as an unethical nation which aggressively attacks another nation. This speech convinces the world that what the United States does is something good. The analysis of interpersonal meaning can be divided into two analyses, namely the analysis of mood and th ...
Future-time reference in truth
... ‘is playing’ (traditionally called ‘tenseless future’ and ‘futurative progressive’ respectively), I propose to use a truth-conditional pragmatic account (e.g. Recanati 2003) in which truth value is predicated of an utterance, or what is said by the speaker. In other words, in order to capture the te ...
... ‘is playing’ (traditionally called ‘tenseless future’ and ‘futurative progressive’ respectively), I propose to use a truth-conditional pragmatic account (e.g. Recanati 2003) in which truth value is predicated of an utterance, or what is said by the speaker. In other words, in order to capture the te ...
COOPERATION & IMPLICATURE
... • Content conditions – The content of the utterance is about a future event and the speaker is committed to the act. ...
... • Content conditions – The content of the utterance is about a future event and the speaker is committed to the act. ...
pragmatics
... We are dealing in fact with the uttering of the words of the performative or speech act under particular circumstances (in the course of a marriage ceremony, when smashing a bottle against the stem, when drawing a will). Speech act theory analyses the role of utterances in relation to the behaviour ...
... We are dealing in fact with the uttering of the words of the performative or speech act under particular circumstances (in the course of a marriage ceremony, when smashing a bottle against the stem, when drawing a will). Speech act theory analyses the role of utterances in relation to the behaviour ...
pragmatics 2 - Studentportalen
... However, the two above are not equivalents, the second one being much ‘harsher’, or having a different impact. Another problem can be the difficulty of identifying performative verbs for all utterances, as in ...
... However, the two above are not equivalents, the second one being much ‘harsher’, or having a different impact. Another problem can be the difficulty of identifying performative verbs for all utterances, as in ...
pragmatics
... 1) Determine, by considering context and normal conversation behavior, what the real intended meaning is? Ask: “WHAT IS SHE REALLY DOING?” 2) Do you see any performative V? If so, it is direct. 3) If no, does the intended meaning match the typical sentence form? If yes, then it is direct. 4) Are the ...
... 1) Determine, by considering context and normal conversation behavior, what the real intended meaning is? Ask: “WHAT IS SHE REALLY DOING?” 2) Do you see any performative V? If so, it is direct. 3) If no, does the intended meaning match the typical sentence form? If yes, then it is direct. 4) Are the ...
next word index
... Biword and phrase indexes • Holding terms together in the index • Simple biword index: • retrieval of, of information • Sophisticated: POS tagger selects nouns • N x* N retrieval of this information • Phrase index: includes variable lengths of word ...
... Biword and phrase indexes • Holding terms together in the index • Simple biword index: • retrieval of, of information • Sophisticated: POS tagger selects nouns • N x* N retrieval of this information • Phrase index: includes variable lengths of word ...
phrase index
... Biword and phrase indexes • Holding terms together in the index • Simple biword index: • retrieval of, of information • Sophisticated: POS tagger selects nouns • N x* N retrieval of this information • Phrase index: includes variable lengths of word ...
... Biword and phrase indexes • Holding terms together in the index • Simple biword index: • retrieval of, of information • Sophisticated: POS tagger selects nouns • N x* N retrieval of this information • Phrase index: includes variable lengths of word ...
The perlocutionary act
... Although all the above features have been treated separately for the sake of clarity, the fact is that all or most of them normally appear together in a bundle, as can be seen in the following utterance (made by a dancing teacher in her class to one of her new students): Is she your partner? I mean, ...
... Although all the above features have been treated separately for the sake of clarity, the fact is that all or most of them normally appear together in a bundle, as can be seen in the following utterance (made by a dancing teacher in her class to one of her new students): Is she your partner? I mean, ...
Catalan Sign Language - Dipartimento di Filosofia
... in principle argue that the coarticulation of a manual pronoun with the specific nonmanual markings of RS is actually the realization of a distinct series of pronouns of the logophoric type. This position, though, cannot be sustained mainly for two reasons. First, the nonmanual morphology associated ...
... in principle argue that the coarticulation of a manual pronoun with the specific nonmanual markings of RS is actually the realization of a distinct series of pronouns of the logophoric type. This position, though, cannot be sustained mainly for two reasons. First, the nonmanual morphology associated ...
6 Cfu
... identifying the differences between spontaneous, face-to face conversation and formal prose of an academic or specialistic nature. Discourse analysis studies the elements of cohesion and coherence that create text. ...
... identifying the differences between spontaneous, face-to face conversation and formal prose of an academic or specialistic nature. Discourse analysis studies the elements of cohesion and coherence that create text. ...