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Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
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Pragmatics (Hardcover)
N. Burton-Roberts; Contributions by Jay David Atlas, Kent Bach, Herman Cappelen, Ira A. Noveck, …
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R1,412
Discovery Miles 14 120
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This contribution to Palgrave's 'Advances' series addresses a wide
range of issues that have arisen in post-Gricean pragmatic theory,
in chapters by distinguished authors. Among the specific topics
covered are scalar implicatures, lexical semantics and pragmatics,
indexicality, procedural meaning, the semantics and pragmatics of
negation. The volume includes both defences and critiques of
Relevance Theory and of Neo-Gricean Pragmatics.
The importance of discourse markers (words like "so," "however," and "well") lies in the theoretical questions they raise about the nature of discourse and the relationship between linguistic meaning and context. Diane Blakemore asserts that the exercise in classification that has dominated discourse marker research should be replaced by the investigation of the way in which linguistic expressions contribute to the inferential processes involved in utterance understanding.
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Pragmatics (Paperback)
N. Burton-Roberts; Contributions by Jay David Atlas, Kent Bach, Herman Cappelen, Ira A. Noveck, …
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R1,390
Discovery Miles 13 900
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This contribution to Palgrave's 'Advances' series addresses a wide
range of issues that have arisen in post-Gricean pragmatic theory,
in chapters by distinguished authors. Among the specific topics
covered are scalar implicatures, lexical semantics and pragmatics,
indexicality, procedural meaning, the semantics and pragmatics of
negation. The volume includes both defences and critiques of
Relevance Theory and of Neo-Gricean Pragmatics.
The importance of discourse markers (words like 'so', 'however',
and 'well') lies in the theoretical questions they raise about the
nature of discourse and the relationship between linguistic meaning
and context. They are regarded as being central to semantics
because they raise problems for standard theories of meaning, and
to pragmatics because they seem to play a role in the way discourse
is understood. In this new and important study, Diane Blakemore
argues that attempts to analyse these expressions within standard
semantic frameworks raise even more problems, while their analysis
as expressions that link segments of discourse has led to an
unproductive and confusing exercise in classification. She
concludes that the exercise in classification that has dominated
discourse marker research should be replaced by the investigation
of the way in which linguistic expressions contribute to the
inferential processes involved in utterance understanding.
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