Scan0056

Scan0056



acceptable (that is to say, appropriate in context) without being grammatically well-formed as a sentence. This would seem to suggest that speech-act meaning cannot, after all, be subsumed under the study of sentence meaning.

Since an utterance consists of a certain seąuence or phrase with a certain syntactic structure and madę up of words with certain meanings, its interpretation will depend on the hearer’s linguistic knowledge. However, sińce it is produced by a particular speaker on a particular occasion and the hearer’s task is to discover what that speaker meant on that occasion, its interpretation will also depend on the non-linguistic knowledge thatshe brings to bear. ...

The assumption ... is that there is a distinction between a hearer’s knowledge of her language and her knowledge of the world. In this section I shall argue that it is this distinction that underlies the distinction between semantics and pragmatics. ...

The assumption that there is a distinction between linguistic and non-linguistic knowledge marks our approach as modular, and thus as consistent with the view of language found in Chomskyan generative grammar. According to this approach, knowledge of language is one of a system of interacting modules which make up the mind, each of which has its own particular properties. This implies that the mind does not develop as a whole, but with specific capacities developing in their own ways and in their own time. In other words, knowledge of language cannot be regarded as the result of generał intelligence. It also implies that actual linguistic performance—that is, the way we use language—is a result of the interaction of a number of differ-ent systems, and that the acceptability of an utterance may be affected by factors other than its grammatical well-formedness. An utterance may consist of a perfectly grammatical sentence and still be unacceptable. Equally, an ungrammatical sentence may be used in the production of a perfectly acceptable utterance.

O How do the last two sentences in this text key in with the points madę in Text 12 f

t> How do the points madę about modules in this text cor-respond to what is sald about them in Text 19?

I> Reference is madę here to the ‘occasion of utterance. In Text

108 READING S

20 reference is madę to the ‘contexf of utterance. Do they mean the same, and are they given the same weight in the description of meaning?

Chapter 6

Current issues

Text 22

deborah schiffrin \ Approach es to Discourse.

Blackwell T994, pages 418-19

This text raises ąuestions about the scope of linguistics as a discipline (see Chapter 6, pages 69-72). When the study of language is extended to account for the pragmatics of dr. course (see Chapter 5, pages 61-S) il neccssarily he, orne involved in the real world context$ in whii li language r. u-.ed for communication. This lahes u - heyoud tln- ope .9 Im guistics as tradilionally < om eiued and mtn ,1 houiih-i um-idu ciplinary enąuiry aboul hunian knou lrdgr .md lu-h.n euu Linguistics may he neeessary, hut ii /■. o. a uf je tent

... I want to suggest that discourse ca miot bt .iii.tly.-. .1 rvrn it one considers one’s analysis linguistically niolivalt il .md hnr, 111. tically relevant—through one discipline alone. Considei ilu isnir-. about which all discourse anaiysts make assumptions: sl i uclure and function, text and context, discourse and communication. In each pair of concepts, the first member is the one that fits most comfortably into the realm of linguistic inquiry. To be specific: structures can be identified at many levels of linguistic organiza-tion (sounds, sentences), but functions are usually seen as non-linguistic (e.g. cognitive, social); texts are linguistic, but contexts include non-linguistic situations and people; even discourse, although rarely seen as confined to language per se, is certainly morę langnage-centred a concept than communication (which involves peiiple, inieiitions, and knowledge).

In .1 sciiM-, 1 In 11 1 lir iirrd In combine the study of structure with

thal nl In.....-ni, ni 11111 |c i'.1.111(11 lir 1 elaiionship between text and

eon u . 1. .111.1 11 • inni. .1. n linwdiscoursoisrelatedtocommun-icatinn, i . u 1 imIIi t .n!: l: u.. 11 I his neecl bt*ars clirectly on the

1 oy


im a 1) 1 n <; s


Wyszukiwarka

Podobne podstrony:
36    Societe des Nations — * into force one month from the datę of this notę, that i
mb 29 MUSCLS BUILDING, 29 is to escrcise and dewlop tlić npjjor arm. The hand is to be placed in a s
« —.7 rSA-X. HIGH BI AS IS RICHER FOR IT. The greatest honor a cassette can receive is to be held in
The aim of the reform is to change fundamentally the present status of the working man, that is to e
707svc 07 Nom suppose that TR-707 is to run with 6ASS DRUM 1(BO-1) being selected. the CPU IC5 put*
707svc 07 Nom suppose that TR-707 is to run with 6ASS DRUM 1(BO-1) being selected. the CPU IC5 put*
UHAM051 34 * UNDERSTANDING HEADACHES AND M IG RAI N ES can mean that I have to dnve everyone around
DSCF0022 ESSAYS IN SWEDISH HISTORY it is probably still true to say that the campaign of 1633 would
To sum up In my opinion Moreover especially On disadvantage is that finally On the other
there is one value forx and fory that makes all four expressions in each question equal try to find
Certificate ofCompletion This is to certify that Ewa Kozłowska successfully completed the Pr o duet
fuli vertical loads, like in normal foundations or underpinning. On the other hand, it is to be 

więcej podobnych podstron