Title: PRAGMATICS See also
1PRAGMATICSSee also African American
EnglishEthnicity Indian- American
HumorJewish Humorand Spanish-American
Contrasts
- by Don L. F. Nilsen
- and Alleen Pace Nilsen
2(No Transcript)
3- It was on this date that Donatis comet was
visible over large parts of Southern England. - The comet is barely visible in the picture.
- The people in the picture are not looking at the
comet. They are gathering shells, talking to each
other, or doing other unrelated things. - Mey says that the comet is like pragmatics,
which happens mostly beneath peoples levels of
awareness. - (Mey 329-330)
4- Pragmatics is the study of language in its social
context. It assumes that words have different
meanings in different contexts. - For example, what is the meaning of club,
spade, diamond, and heart? - Or what is the meaning of King, Queen,
Jack, Ace, or ten?
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6- You might say that all of these words have
different meanings in the social context of
playing cards, but thats not the whole story. - In Pinochle there are expressions like 100
Aces, 80 Kings, 60 Queens, 40 Jacks, and
Jack of Diamonds and Queen of Spades that have
special significance. - And in Pinochle there is no two, three,
four, five, six, seven, eight, or
nine.
7- Consider also the word bridge. If youre
playing cards, this word has a different meaning
than if youre a dentist or a road builder. In
cards, the bridge is the partner of the person
who wins the bid. The bid winner plays both his
hand and the hand of the bridge. - And in Bridge, there are special meanings of
to bid, to trump, to pass, and to
finesse. - And seven means seven and there is no
eleven, but in Dice, seven and eleven are
craps, which means you win on the first throw
but lose on all subsequent throws with these
numbers.
8- And in Poker, things get really wild. The
Joker is always wild but One-Eyed Jacks might
be wild or not. - And there is a raw deal, and a big deal, and
the New Deal, in politics. - And there are straights, flushes, and full
houses and there is Stud Poker, Draw Poker,
Texas Hold Em, and Strip Poker. And a
person can ante up, into the kitty, be in
or out, and can hold, fold or raise.
9- And in 21 Poker, an Ace can count as either
one or eleven, and all face cards count as
ten. - And in Hearts, the hearts count one point, and
the Queen of Spades counts 27 points. And you
want to get as few points as possible. Unless
you think you can get all of the points. - Only for Alice in Wonderland could it be more
complicated.
10DIALECTS OF FORMALITY
- Frozen Prissy Text Book
- Formal Most Text Books
- Consultative Conversations among Strangers or
Large Groups - Casual Conversations among Close Friends
- Intimate Conversations among Family Members or
Lovers - Martin Joos The Five Clocks
11DISAMBIGUATION
- Explain how context could help to disambiguate
the following - He waited by the bank.
- Is he really that kind?
- The proprietor of the fish store was the sole
owner. - The long drill was boring.
- When he got the clear title to the land, it was a
good deed.
12- It takes a good ruler to make a straight line.
- He saw that gasoline can explode.
- You should see her shop.
- Every man loves a woman.
- Bill wants to marry a Norwegian woman.
13OBSCENITIES
- Obscenities are based on taboos, and taboos are
culturally determined and change through time. - The religious right is offended by words relating
to certain body parts and functions, or other
vulgarities, obscenities, profanities, swearing,
etc. - The liberal left is offended by words degrading
to particular genders, ethnicities, disabilities,
etc.
14- Something obscene in one culture is not obscene
in a different culture. Consider the following - derriere
- fag or faggot
- Grand Tetons Mountain Range
- solicitor
- to knock someone up
- NOTE Refined foreign students discussing
American slang often dont realize the power of
American obscenities
15- The name Voldemort is taboo and is not to be
uttered by anyone at Hogwarts Academy. - The words corset, shirt, leg, and woman used to
be taboo words in English. - In Shaws Pygmalion, Professor Higgins asked,
Are you walking across the Park, Miss
Doolittle? and Eliza Doolittle responded, Walk!
Not bloody likely. I am going in a taxi. - This use of bloody startled London when the play
was first produced in 1910. - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 443)
16FOUR-LETTER WORDS
- English has many Anglo-Saxon or four letter
words however for each of these it is possible
to find a Latinate paraphrase that is more
polite. Think without speaking of the
four-letter words associated with each of the
following
17- Defecate
- Eliminate
- Expectorate
- Feces
- Fornicate
- Intercourse
- Mammary gland
- Penis
- Vagina
- (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 244)
18ORIENTATION
- Charles Fillmore says that a three-dimensional
box has six sides. - But if you put it on the floor, it has four sides
and a top and a bottom. - And if you place it against a wall, it has two
sides a top a bottom and a front and a back. - And if you put drawers in it, it has a right
side, a left side, a top, a bottom, a front and a
back. - And right and left are your right and left as
you face it, not the dressers right and left
which is facing you.
19PIDGINS AND CREOLES
- Pidgins and creoles tend to be quite metaphorical
and poetic. Here are some examples - Fella belong Mrs. Queen Prince Philip, Husband
of Queen Elizabeth II - muckamuck to eat, drink, or pucker the mouth
- him brother belong me friend
- lamp belong Jesus sun
- gubmint catchum-fella policeman
- grass belong face whiskers
- him belly allatime burn thirsty man
- him cow pig have kittens Has the Masters sow
given birth to a litter yet? - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 434-436)
20- Haitian Creole is a creole based on French.
- Jamaican Creole is a creole based on English.
- Gullah is an English-based creole spoken by
descendants of African slaves off the coasts of
Georgia and South Carolina. - Louisiana Creole is spoken in Louisiana.
- Tok Pisin as a Melanesian Pidgin English spoken
in Papua, New Guinea. - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 437)
21PRECONDITIONS FOR SPEECH ACTS
- Explain how linguistic and social context help in
understanding the following sentences - You make a better door than a window.
- Its getting late.
- The restaurants are open until midnight.
- If youd diet, this wouldnt hurt so badly.
- I thought I saw a fan in the closet.
22- Mr. Smith dresses neatly, is well-groomed, and is
always on time to class. - Most of the food is gone.
- John or Mary made a mistake.
- Did you make a doctors appointment?
- Do you have the play tickets?
- Does your grandmother have a live-in boyfriend?
- How did you like the string quartet?
- What are Bostons chances of winning the World
Series?
23- Do you own a cat?
- LAURA Did you mow the grass and wash the car
like I told you to? JACK I mowed the grass. - LAURA Do you want dessert? JACK Is the Pope
Catholic? - When did you stop paying alimony to your ex-wife?
- (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 219)
24SLANG, JARGON AND ARGOT
- Slang, Jargon and Argot are all gate-keeping
languages used as much to identify members of a
particular group as to communicate. - Slang is age relatedmainly high school and
college students. - Jargon is profession relatedevery profession has
its own jargon. - Argot is underworld relatedits designed to
communicate to the group and not to the
authorities. - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 439-442)
25- Carl Sandburg said, Slang is language which
takes off its coat, spits on its handsand goes
to work. - SLANG EXAMPLES spaced out, right on, to barf, to
dis someone, rave (wild party), ecstasy (drug),
crib (home), posse (friends) - JARGON EXAMPLES phoneme, morpheme, case,
lexicojn, phrase structure rule - ARGOT EXAMPLES He was hoopty around dimday when
some mud duck with a tray-eight tried to take him
out of the box. TRANSLATION He was in his
car about dusk when a woman armed with a .38
caliber gun tried to kill him. - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 439-441)
26THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF MEANING
- Penelope Eckert said, the use of variation does
not simply reflect, but constructs, social
categories and social meaning. - (Eckert 4)
27SOCIAL-VARIABILITYIN LINGUISTIC RULES
- Minimal Pairs
- Word Lists
- Reading Style
- Careful Speech
- Casual Speech
- (William Labovs Categories)
28WEBSTERS THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
- This dictionary, published in 1961, was the first
major dictionary that obliterated the older
distinction between standard, substandard,
colloquial, vulgar, and slang. - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 418)
- Is this a good thing or a bad thing? Explain.
29NORTHERN, MIDLAND SOUTHERN EXPANSION WESTWARD
(Shuy 294)
30PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES
- greasy grizi
- with wIð
- spoon (noon) spjun
- creek krIk
- roof rUf
- However, wash with an intrusive r is not so
much regional as rural.
31PHONOLOGICAL DISTINCTIONS THAT ARE BECOMING LOST
- cot-caught
- witch-which
- mourning morning
- However, pin-pen is remaining stable.
32BRITISH-AMERICAN PRONUNCIATION DIFFERENCES
- calf, bath, pass, aunt
- learn, fork, core, brother
- carry, very
- either, neither, potato, tomato
- clerk, schedule
- captain, bottle (glottals in Cockney)
- (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 454)
33BRITISH-AMERICANSTRESS DIFFERENCES
- aluminum applicable
- cigarette dictionary
- formidable kilometer
- laboratory necessary
- missionary secretary
- stationery territory
- (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 413)
34CALIFORNIA VALLEY-GIRLAND SURFER-DUDE SPEECH
- Rising Inflections (like Australian English)
- Animated Body Language (like sticking a finger
down the throat) - Specialized Vocabulary (like dude, esp.
relating to shopping malls, the beach, and
personality types)
35CANADIAN PHONOLOGY
- out and about the house
- schedule
- Canadian -eh
36NEW ENGLAND PHONOLOGY
- lot (New England)
- park the car Cuba-r-is
- merry marry Mary
- calf (pass, path, dance)
- Brooklyn dis, dat, dese, dose, dem
37SOUTHERN PHONOLOGY
- Mrs. mIz
- hog (frog, dog, Deputy Dog)
- south gt souf
- during gt doin, and going gt gon,
- help gt hep
- test gt tes
- ring gt rang,
- boy gt boah,
- car gt cah
- POlice
- nasal twang (Texas and Oklahoma)
- southern drawl
- (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 423)
38GRAMMAR DIFFERENCES
- Double Modals might could
- Negative Modals hadnt ought
- Strange Past Participles larnt
- Strange Possessive Pronouns yourn, hisn, hern,
ourn, theirn - Strange Prepositions a quarter before eight
- Strange Conjunctions unless gt without, lessen,
thouten - Strange Adverbs anywheres, nowheres
- (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 416-417)
39VOCABULARY DIFFERENCES
- What do you fry your eggs in?
- creeper, fryer, frying pan, fry pan, skillet, or
spider - What do you call a soft drink?
- pop, soda, soda pop, or tonic?
- What do you call a long sandwich containing
salami etc.? - hero, submarine, hoagy, grinder or poorboy
40- What do you drink water out of?
- drinking fountain, cooler, bubbler or geyser
- How do you get something from one place to
another? - take, carry, or tote
- What do you carry things in?
- a bag, a sack, or a poke
- How do you speculate?
- reckon, guess, figgure, figger, suspect, imagine
- (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 414)
41BRITISH-AMERICAN VOCABULARY DIFFERENCES
- bird, bobby, bonnet, boot, braces, clothes peg,
first floor, flat, lift, lorry, nickers, peruque,
petrol, pram, pub, public school, queue, spanner,
tele, torch, trousers, tube, westcoat - girl, cop, hood (of a car), trunk (of a car),
suspenders, clothes pin, second floor, apartment,
elevator, truck, underwear, wig, gasoline, baby
buggy, bar, private school, line, monkey wrench,
television, flashlight, pants, subway, vest - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 414, 456)
42SOUTHERN VOCABULARY
- chitlins and grits
- to buy a pig in a poke
- Carry me Back to Old Virginie
43BRITISH-AMERICANSPELLING DIFFERENCES
- Cheque
- centre, theatre
- colour, honour
- defence, offence
- labelled, travelled
- Pyjamas
- tyre
44BRITISH EXPRESSIONS TO WATCH OUT FOR
- fag or faggot (wood for the fireplace, or
cigarette) - soliciter (lawyer)
- to knock someone up (wake them up in the morning)
45COCKNEY RHYMING SLANG
- apples and pears (stairs)
- Aristotle (bottle)
- pigs ear (beer)
- Mother Hubbard (cupboard)
- plates and dishes (Mrs.)
46ETHNIC HUMORTO INVESTIGATE STEREOTYPES
47HEAVEN AND HELL
- In Heaven, all the cooks are French all the
mechanics are German all the musicians are
Italian. - In Hell, all the cooks are English all the
mechanics are French all the soldiers are
Italian.
48BRITISH DIALECT ETHNICITY
- A guy wakes up, finds himself in a British
hospital, and says, Did I come here to die? - The Cokney nurse responds, No, I think it was
yesterdie.
49BRONX DIALECT ETHNICITY
- In a New York City Park one guy turns to another
guy and says, Look at de boids. - The other guy says, Those arent boids.
Theyre birds. - The first guy says, Cheez, dats funny, dey
choip like boids.
50LIGHTBULB JOKESTO INVESTIGATE STEREOTYPES
- How many New Yorkers?
- Three One to do it and two to criticize.
- How many grad students?
- Three Two, plus a professor to take the credit
- How many Jewish mothers?
- None Ill just sit in the dark.
- (Nilsen Nilsen 176)
51!SOUTHERN ETHNICITY
- A radio comedian once remarked that the
Mason-Dixon line is the dividing line between
you-all and youse-guys. - (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 2007 412)
52!!COMEDY TEAMS ARE ETHNICALLY OR GENDER DETERMINED
- 43 out of the 500 entries in Ronald L. Smiths
Whos Who in Comedy are about comedy teams.
There are many reasons for this high number - Teams are often more recognized and more
memorable than are the individuals who make up
the teams.
53- !!!Good chemistry enhances creativity and
enjoyment. - Through interacting with each other, team members
can revitalize old gags. - Differing appearances, personalities and voices
provide for contrast and for the efficient
creation of stock characters. - With teams, audiences can enjoy both surprise and
anticipation because while teams do new material
they usually have a style that carries over from
one performance to another. - (Nilsen Nilsen 82)
54PRAGMATICS WEB SITE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PRAGMATICS (JOHN BENJAMINS)
- http//www.benjamins.com/online/bop/topbar.html
55- References
- Alvarez, Lizette Alvarez. Its the Talk of Nueva
York The Hybrid called Spanglish (Clark,
483-488). - Apte, Mahadev L. Humor and Laughter An
Anthropological Approach. Ithaca, NY Cornell
University Press, 1985. - Boskin, Joseph. Rebellious Laughter Peoples
Humor in American Culture. Syracuse, NY Syracuse
University Press,1997. - Brown, Penelope, and Stephen C. Levinson.
Politeness Some Universals in Language Usage.
Cambridge, England Cambridge University Press,
1987. - Clark, Virginia, Paul Eschholz, and Alfred Rosa.
Language Readings in Language and Culture, 6th
Edition. New York, NY St. Martins Press, 1998. - Davies, Christie. Jokes and Their Relation to
Society. New York, NY Mouton, 1998.
56- Dolitsky, Marlene. Humor and the Unsaid.
Journal of Pragmatics 7 (1983) 39-48. - Dundes, Alan. Cracking Jokes Studies of Sick
Humor Cycles and Stereotypes. Berkeley, CA Ten
Speed Press, 1987. - Dundes, Alan, and Carl R. Pagter. Never Try to
Teach a Pig to Sing Still More Urban Folklore
from the Paperwork Empire. Detroit, MI Wayne
State Univ Press, 1996. - Dundes, Alan, and Carl R. Pagter. Sometimes the
Dragon Wins Yet More Urban Folklore from the
Paperwork Empire. Syracuse, NY Syracuse Univ
Press, 1996. - Dundes, Alan, and Carl R. Pagter. When Youre Up
to Your Ass in Alligators More Urban Folklore
from the Paperwork Empire. Detroit, MI Wayne
State Univ Press, 1987. - Dundes, Alan, and Carl R. Pagter. Work Hard and
You Shall be Rewarded Urban Folklore from the
Paperwork Empire. Bloomington, IN Indiana Univ
Press, 1975.
57- Eckert, Penelope. Constructing Meaning in
Sociolinguistic Variation. Paper presented at the
Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological
Associatin in New Orleans, 2002. - Eschholz, Paul, Alfred Rosa, and Virginia Clark.
Language Awareness Readings for College Writers.
New York, NY Bedford/St. Martins, 2009 - Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman, and Nina Hyams.
Language and Society. An Introduction to
Language, 8th Edition. Boston, MA Thomson
Wadsworth, 2007 9th Edition, 2011, 430-487. - Goffman, Erving. Interaction Ritual Essays on
Face-to-Face Bahavior. Garolen City, NY
Anchor/Doubleday, 1967. - Kotthoff, Helga. Pragmatics of Performance and
the Analysis of Conversational Humor. HUMOR 19.3
(2006) 271-304.
58- Labov, William. Social Stratification of English
in New York City. Washington, DC Center for
Applied Linguistics, 1966. - Mey, Jacob. Pragmatics An Introduction, 2nd
Edition. Malden, MA Blackwell, 2001. - Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen.
Encyclopedia of 20th Century American Humor.
Westport, CT Greenwood, 2000. - Nilsen, Don L. F. Humor in Irish Literature.
Westport, CT Greenwood, 1996.
59- Raskin, Victor Introduction The Pragmatics of
Humor. Journal of Pragmatics 35 (2003)
1287-1294. - Raskin, Victor. The Primer of Humor Research. New
York, NY Mouton de Gruyter, 2008 - Shuy, Roger. Dialects How They Differ (Clark,
292-312). - Yamaguchi, Haruhiko. How to Pull Strings with
Words Deceptive Violations in the Garden-Path
Joke. Journal of Pragmatics 12 (1988) 323-337. - Yus, Francisco. Humor and the Search for
Relevance. Journal of Pragmatics 35 (2003)
1295-1331.