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Chapter 08


Student resources for Chapter 08: Pragmatics

Study guide for Chapter 08: Pragmatics


Terminology
You should be able to simply define or explain the following terms and concepts.

context inferences
linguistic underdeterminacy extralinguistic competence
Cooperative Principle Gricean Maxims
particularized conversational implicatures logical entailments
Principle of Relevance Optimal Relevance
explicature explicated inference
semantics/pragmatics division of labor semanticization

Concepts

  • Pragmatics is our ability to draw contextually plausible inferences.

  • Linguistic utterances are under-determined; not all linguistic meaning results from the semantics.

  • Pragmatic inferences play a critical role in giving coherence to stretches of discourse, thus making language work as a communicative system.

  • Grice proposed the Cooperative Principle for producing cooperative coherent conversational discourse, based on four maxims: Quantity, Quality, Relation, Manner.

  • For an utterance to be Relevant (in Sperber and Wilson’s sense) there must be sufficient amount of contextual implications relative to the processing effort to draw them.

  • The greater the number of contextual implications, the more Relevant the utterance.

  • Semantic meaning, contextual assumptions, explicated inferences, and implicatures all contribute to the overall conveyed meaning of an utterance.

  • Semanticization is a historical process whereby pragmatic inferences become reinterpreted as part of the semantics (linguistic meaning) of an expression.


Skills
On completion of this chapter, you should be able to perform the following tasks

  • Determine contributions of different types of context to the overall conveyed meaning of an utterance

  • Evaluate utterances for their adherence to, or deviation from, Gricean maxims

  • Discuss the contributions to pragmatic theory made by Grice and by Sperber and Wilson

  • Discuss differences between entailments, implicatures, and explicated inferences, and identify them in linguistic examples

  • Define semanticization and provide examples when prompted

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