Course 5 - Cooperative Principle and Implicature
Course 5 - Cooperative Principle and Implicature
Course 5 - Cooperative Principle and Implicature
Make your contribution as informative as is required for the current purpose of the exchange.
Eg. I like some of the articles in this journal. > gives rise to the implicature I dont like all articles
Do not make your contribution more informative than is required.
Eg. I dont drink > I dont drink alcohol.
2. Maxim of Quality:
FLOUTING MAXIMS
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Brown is the new black as far as shoes are concerned flouts the maxim of Manner
Im a man spoken by a man: a flout on Quantity as its self-evident
spoken by a woman: a flout on Quality as its false
He looks his age flouts Quantity as it is not informative enough
A: Have you done your homework?
B: Ive had a dentists appointment.
Flouts Relevance as Bs response isnt an answer to the question asked
Insults fly on aircraft toilets (newspaper headline) flouts Manner as it is ambiguous
The best 4x4xfar (Advertisement for Land Rover). the multiplication symbol represents the lexical item by
First and fourmost (Advertisement for Land Rover). homophones
BA better connected person (Advertisement, British Airways). ambiguity BA and be a and the ambiguity
between the connotations of better connected connected to more flights and having an impressive social
network
Acts on the spot (Advertisement for acne product). an obscure way of conveying both the idiomatic meaning
immediately and the literal meaning pimple
Flouting the co-operative principle in order to make a point more forcefully also explains:
metaphors (Queen Victoria was made of iron)
hyperbole (Ive got millions of beers in my cellar)
irony and sarcasm (I love it when you sing out of key all the time)
humour (e.g. puns)
In all cases of flouting the maxims, the utterance alerts the addressee to the need to infer an implied meaning.
Flouting the maxims generates implicatures.
The situations which chiefly interested Grice were those in which a speaker blatantly, deliberately, fails to
observe a maxim, not with any intention of deceiving or misleading, but because the speaker wants to prompt
the hearer to look for a meaning which is different from the expressed meaning.
HEDGES IN UTTERANCES
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Speakers are frequently reluctant to make bald statements, so they often use expressions or even entire clauses
as notes to either alleviate the impact of utterances or to comment on the maxims.
They are used to show that the speaker is cautious of the maxims.
Hedges have a metalingual function and serve as comments on the extent to which the speaker is abiding by the
conversational maxims.
They mark that speakers may be in danger of not fully adhering to the maxims. The following examples are
taken from Yule (1996:38-39):
E.g.:
Hedges to the Maxim of Quality:
a. As far as I know, theyre married.
b. I may be mistaken, but I thought I saw a wedding ring on her finger.
c. Im not sure if this is right, but I heard it was a secret ceremony in Hawaii.
d. He couldnt live without her, I guess.
Hedges to the Maxim of Quantity:
a. As you probably know, I am afraid of dogs.
b. So, to cut a long story short, we grabbed our stuff and ran.
c. I wont bore you with all the details, but it was an exciting trip.
Hedges to the Maxim of Relation:
a. I dont know if this is important, but some of the files are missing.
b. This may sound like a dumb question, but whose handwriting is this?
c. Not to change the subject, but is this related to the budget?
Hedges to the Maxim of Manner:
a. This may be a bit confused, but I remember being in a car.
b. Im not sure if this makes sense, but the car had no lights.
c. I dont know if this is clear at all, but I think the other car was reversing.
IMPLICATURE (a term coined by Grice in the article Logic and Conversation, 1989) = meaning that
is conveyed indirectly or through hints, but not explicitly stated
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Eg. I should be back by eight but you know what trains are like.
The speaker implies that they probably wont get back by eight although they do not state it explicitly. The
hearer infers that the speaker will probably be late and also that trains are not reliable.
Eg. Its the taste.
Context 1: Coca-Cola advertisement
Context 2: daughter to father when asked why she hasnt eaten her lunch at school.
The same sentence can convey 2 meanings that are the opposite of one another and neither meaning is explicitly
stated by the speaker.
In almost all utterances, it is context that makes the hearer distinguish between
what is said
what is meant and not said
Generalized conversational implicature
A generalized conversational implicature arises when no special knowledge is required to calculate the
additional conveyed meaning.
Scalar Implicature
Information may be conveyed using a word which expresses one value from a scale of values such as:
All-most-many-some-few
Will-should-may-might
Always-often-sometimes-never
When producing the utterance, a speaker selects the word from the scale of values which best suits the purpose
of communication and is the most informative and truthful (quantity and quality).
Some of the hijackers have been caught. not All-most-many- -few
When any form in the scale is asserted, the negative of all forms higher on the scale is implicated.
Conventional implicatures
There are some words that help create non-conversational implicatures, such as but, even and still.