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Pragmatic Aspects of Scalar Modifiers - The Semantics-Pragmatics Interface (Paperback)
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Pragmatic Aspects of Scalar Modifiers - The Semantics-Pragmatics Interface (Paperback)
Series: Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics, 69
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This volume examines the meaning of scalar modifiers - expressions
such as more than, a bit, and much - from the standpoint of the
interface between semantics and pragmatics. In natural language,
scalar expressions such as comparatives, intensifiers, and
minimizers are used for measuring an object or event at a semantic
level. However, cross-linguistically scalar modifiers can often be
used to express a range of subjective feelings or discourse
pragmatic information at the level of conventional implicature
(CI). For example, in English more than anything can signal the
degree of importance of the given utterance, and in Japanese the
minimizer chotto 'a bit' can weaken the degree of imposition of the
speech act. In this book, Osamu Sawada draws on data from Japanese
and a range of other languages to explore the dual-use phenomenon
of scalar modifiers: he claims that although semantic scalar
meanings and CI scalar meanings are logically different, the
relationship between the two makes it crucial to examine them both
together. The volume provides a new perspective on the
semantic-pragmatics interface, and will be of interest to
researchers and students of Japanese linguistics, semantics and
pragmatics, and theoretical linguistics more generally.
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