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21 mar 2016 · This document discusses speech act theory, which analyzes the functions of language use beyond just describing or conveying information. It covers: - John Austin's seminal work distinguishing locutionary acts (literal meaning), illocutionary acts (intended function), and perlocutionary acts (effects on the listener).
- Speech Act Theory | PPT | Free Download - SlideShare
This document provides an overview of speech act theory,...
- Speech Act Theory | PPT | Free Download - SlideShare
Make a commitment: [Commissive] “I will take you to Disneyland for your birthday.”. Create a new state of affairs: [Declaration] “We the jury find the defendant to be guilty.”. Express an emotion: [Expressive] “I’m thrilled that you will be going to law school.”. Explicit vs. Implicit Illocutions.
Speech Act Theory: Summary 1. All utterances serve to express propositions and to perform actions 2. The (illocutionary) speech act is associated by convention with the form of the utterance 3. In English the normal form for illocutionary speech acts is I (hereby) Vp you (that) S where Vp is a performative verb conjugated in the simple present ...
31 gru 2020 · This document provides an overview of speech act theory, which proposes that language is used not just to convey information but to perform actions. It defines locutionary, illocutionary, and perlocutionary speech acts and discusses John Searle's classification of five illocutionary points: directives, commissives, representatives, declaratives
Microsoft PowerPoint - Speech act analysis.ppt. Speech Act Theory: Hearsay. Analysis. Assertives: Implicit illocution. Boy points to a horse and says: “That’s father’s mare.” Issue: Whether the boy made an assertion. Issue: Whether the boy asserted that it was his father’s mare. Issue: Whether the boy believes that it was his father’s mare.
This handout is about doing things with words: the stable conventions surrounding how we signal to others that we intend to perform specific speech acts, the nature of those speech acts, and the effects those speech acts can have. It’s a highly uncertain, context-dependent process that has important social and legal consequences. 2 Locutionary act.
If we are to develop a linguistically satisfying account of speech acts and speech act types, we need to provide empirical evidence for the types of speech acts proposed and a theoretically interesting explanation of how they are differentiated and recognized by interlocutors.