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Review%20Exercises

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Review Exercises. 1) Do the COMPONENTIAL analysis (not the ... hen b) rooster. Componential analysis. 2) Does A' entail B'? 1) A: 'I eat bananas every morning. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Review%20Exercises


1
Review Exercises
  • 1) Do the COMPONENTIAL analysis (not the
    compositional one) of the following words
  • hen b) rooster
  • Componential analysis
  • 2) Does A entail B?
  • 1) A I eat bananas every morning.
  • B I eat fruit every morning.
  • 2) A Campbell's soup has 1/3 less salt.
  • B Other brands have 1/3 more salt.
  • Implicatures/Entailments

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2
Semantic Decomposition
  • woman
  • human
  • female
  • adult
  • man
  • human
  • - female
  • adult
  • girl
  • human
  • female
  • - adult
  • boy
  • human
  • - female
  • - adult

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3
Entailment and Implicatures
  • Sentence A entails B if whenever A is true, B
    must be true as well. (e.g. Mary eats banana
    ENTAILS Mary eats fruit) Semantic implication
  • A implicates B if
  • 1- A does NOT entail B, AND
  • 2- Speaker is warranted in assuming B is true
    based on both the meaning of A conversation
    rules (e.g Not everyone will come IMPLICATES
    someone will come)
  • Pragmatic implication

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4
Conflict With Language in Advertising
  • Old question how truthful advertisers ought to
    be?
  • Are they responsible for what their claims entail
    only or also for what they implicate?
  • e.g. ABC filters remove bacteria from your
    drinking water
  • Are we to JUST understand what that sentenece
    literally conveys its entailment (it removes AT
    LEAST one tiny bacteria from drinking water)?
  • OR,
  • Are we to believe (as the advertiser may intend
    us to) that if we use ABC filters, our drinking
    water will be free of bacteria, which is not
    really entailed but IMPLICATED?

5
ANSWER to OLD QUESTION
  • Because implicatures are crucial to language
    (seen in the hard entailment-implicature
    distinction), its only right that advertisers
    be responsible for both entailments and
    implicatures of their claims (p. 236).
  • HOWEVER, in reality this isnt always true, since
    advertisers are often responsible just for
    entailments.
  • Consequence advertising often formulates claims
    that implicate a lot but entail a little.
  • They often use many techniques for this purpose.

6
Pragmatics
  • The Study of the Contribution of Context to
    Meaning
  • Or
  • The Study of Language Use

7
Common Questions in Pragmatics
  • How do people use language within a context?
  • Why do they use language in particular ways?
  • How do non-linguistic factors affect language use
    to perform different functions?
  • time
  • place
  • social relation between interactants
  • SUMMARY what is the intention of utterances
    within a context ? (SPEECH ACTS)

8
SPEECH ACTS Human acts performed simply by
using language
  • We use language, for example, for
  • asking or giving information,
  • making requests,
  • complimenting,
  • describing elements,
  • apologizing, etc.
  • This is a (not comprehensive) list of speech
    acts.
  • (There are many other speech acts).

9
3 Common Speech Acts
  • Assertion (gives info),
  • Question (asks for information), and
  • Orders/Requests (has others do or be something).
  • These deserve special mention because (often)
    there are specific syntactic structures for
    marking them.
  • Assertion is (often) through declarative
    sentences,
  • questions through interrogatives, and
  • orders/requests through imperatives.

10
Main Categories of Speech Acts
  • Direct performed by a clear syntactic form
  • Example an interrogative S simply for asking for
    info.
    ( a direct act can also be done performatively)
  • Performative the utterance itself is the very
    act
  • Example I pronounce you husband and wife
  • (2 conditions in 1st person in present tense
    -hereby test)
  • Indirect
  • Indirect speech Acts rely on Felicity
    Conditions to be interpreted

11
Felicity Conditions
  • Why is it that I promise Ill tell Mom if you
    hit me is NOT a promise, but a threat?
  • (It appears to be a promise due to the
    performative verb Promise)
  • - It does not match the Normal Expectations
    for the promise Speech Act.
  • What are those Normal Expectations?
  • Felicity Conditions!!
  • Conditions That Must Be Satisfied If a Speech Act
    Is to Be Performed Appropriately, Correctly, and
    Happily.

12
Felicity Conditions for promises (for example)
  • 1) Speaker (S) offers to do an action (A) for
    hearer (H)
  • 2) S believes A is beneficial to H
  • 3) H wants A
  • 4) S is able/entitled/willing to do A
  • 5) A has not taken place
  • The previous sentence as a promise is
    infelicitous because condition 3 (and probably
    2) is missing. As a threat,
    however, it is felicitous
  • (do you see why?)

13
Indirect Speech Acts
  • The actual intention or what the speaker really
    means is different from what she appears to be
    doing with the sentence itself.
  • The actual intention or meaning does NOT match
    the sentence form (interrogative, imperatives,
    etc.)
  • These do not match the normal, usual and more
    logical/semantic ways to perform such acts.
  • For example, a person can perform a request
    (which normally requires an imperative sentence)
    via a question (with an interrogative sentence).

14
Identifying indirect speech acts
  • Ex. How are you?
  • 1) Determine, by considering context and normal
    conversation behavior, what the real intended
    meaning is? Ask WHAT IS SHE REALLY DOING?
  • 2) Do you see any performative V? If so, it is
    direct.
  • 3) If no, does the intended meaning match the
    typical sentence form? If yes, then it is direct.
  • 4) Are there any felicity conditions violated for
    the speech act of the intended meaning? If no,
    direct.
  • 5) Consider the final effect in the hearer/s,
    which can corroborate or not what the real
    intended meaning is.
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