Pragmatics Lecture 1
Pragmatics Lecture 1
Pragmatics Lecture 1
Third Year
Lecture 1
Course overview
This course focuses on the use of language •
for communication, the construction and
interpretation of linguistic messages among
. interlocutors
The course is about how language acquires •
meaning in context. In many situations,
what speakers mean goes beyond what they
.explicitly say
This course discusses formal models which •
have been proposed for explaining how
these meanings are conveyed between
.cooperative interlocutors
Introductory Lecture
?What is Pragmatics
Introduction
Communication clearly depends on not only •
recognizing the meaning of words in an utterance,
but recognizing what speakers mean by their
.utterances
The study of what speakers mean, or “speaker •
.meaning,” is called pragmatics
•
Example 1
A: The telephone is ringing •
B: I’m in the bath •
A: Ok •
Speakers can easily recognize what is meant when it is not •
explicitly said (uttered) or written
‘ •
Example3
’?What time do you call this •
Pragmatic Meaning: a different question entirely, e.g. Why are you so( •
?late
).Pragmatic Response: Explain the reason for being so late •
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZyhROXjffU&t=18s •
Example 4
I’m cold •
The sentence meaning here is straightforward: The speaker is •
cold. The speaker’s meaning in using this utterance in a given
context, however, could be any of a number of things,
:including
or •
Context
meaning
speaker hearer •
WHY DO WE•
STUDY •
????PRAGMATICS
??
We need pragmatics to understand how language is used .1 •
.in a specific context and to be able to use it appropriately