6533b82afe1ef96bd128cb53
RESEARCH PRODUCT
On the social practice of indirect reports (further advances in the theory of pragmemes)
Alessandro Caponesubject
Linguistics and LanguageArtificial IntelligenceRelevance theoryComplementizerAssertionVerbSociologyPragmaticsObject (philosophy)Language and LinguisticsIndirect speechUtteranceLinguisticsdescription
Abstract This paper deals with the social practice of indirect reports and treats them as cases of language games. It proposes a number of principles like the following: Paraphrasis/Form Principle The that-clause embedded in the verb ‘say’ is a paraphrasis of what Y said, and meets the following constraints: should Y hear what X said he (Y) had said, he would not take issue with it, as to content, but would approve of it as a fair paraphrasis of his original utterance. Furthermore, he would not object to vocalizing the assertion made out of the words following the complementizer ‘that’ on account of its form/style. Furthermore, it connects such principles with Relevance Theory considerations.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2010-02-01 | Journal of Pragmatics |