SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  23
Télécharger pour lire hors ligne
Department of English Language and Literature
Major: English Language and Literature
Semantics Session 12
Interpersonal meaning : Speech Acts
Dr. Badriya Al Mamari
Academic year 2021/2022
A speech act
In linguistics, a speech act is an utterance defined
in terms of a speaker's intention and the effect it
has on a listener. Essentially, it is the action that
the speaker hopes to provoke in his or her
audience.
Speech acts might be requests, warnings,
promises, apologies, greetings, or any number of
declarations.
An Act of Assertation
An ACT of ASSERTION is carried out when a speaker utters a
declarative sentence (which can be either true or false), and
undertakes a certain responsibility, or commitment, to the
hearer, that a particular state of affairs, or situation, exists in the
world.
Example:
‘Simon is in the kitchen’,
I assert to my hearer that in the real world a situation exists in
which a person named Simon is in a room identified by the referring
expression the kitchen.
• According to semanticists there was not much more to the
meanings of sentences (and utterances) than this kind of
correspondence between sentences (and utterances) and the
world. This view has been called the Descriptive Fallacy.
• The DESCRIPTIVE FALLACY is the view that the sole purpose of
making assertions is to DESCRIBE some state of affairs.
• Examples:
Are the following assertions describing some existing state of
affairs in the world??
1.There is a wasp in your left ear’
2.‘Someone has broken the space-bar on my laptop’
3.‘This gun is loaded’
4.‘You are a fool’
5.‘I love you’
• Answers:
1.To warn the hearer of danger of being stung by an insect or
being shocked…
2. To complain about the damage, or to apologize for breaking
the space bar of the laptop , etc.
3. To warn during an armed robbery, or during a weapon-
training lesson, etc.
4.To insult the hearer, or to tease him, etc.
5.To please the hearer or make them feel better…
• Warning, shocking, complaining, apologizing, insulting,
reassuring, etc. are all acts.
• They are all things that we DO, using language.
• An important part of the meaning of utterances is what
speakers DO by uttering them.
• Acts such as teasing, insulting, etc. are aspects of utterance
meaning and not of sentence meaning.
Example:
What does the following utterance mean?
• There’s a piece of fish on the table.
• (1) Could this sentence be uttered as a means of complaining to a
waiter in a restaurant that a table had not been cleared properly?
• (2) Could it, in other circumstances, be uttered to warn one’s
husband or wife not to let the cat in the kitchen?
• (3) Could it, in still other circumstances, be uttered to reassure
one’s husband or wife that his or her lunch has not been
forgotten?
• (4) Could it, in a different situation, be used to incriminate a child
who had raided the refrigerator?
• One sentence can generally be uttered to perform a wide variety
of different acts, depending on who utters it and where, when,
and why it is uttered.
Performed utterance
Examples:
• (1) Can you congratulate someone by a pat on the back, or a hug?
• (2) Can you congratulate someone by uttering ‘Well done’?
• (3) Can you bid at an auction by nodding?
• (4) Can you bid at an auction by saying ‘Eleven pounds’?
• (5) Can you promise someone something by a nod?
• (6) Can you promise someone something with an utterance
beginning ‘I promise . . .’?
• A large number of acts, then, can be performed either by
means of an utterance or by some other means such as
gesture, or by making an appropriate utterance (hug…
nodding…. I promise…11 pounds….etc.)
A performative utterance
vs
Constative utterance
• a performative utterance is one that actually describes the act that it
performs, i.e. it performs some act and simultaneously describes that act.
• a constative utterance is one which makes an assertion (i.e. it is often the
utterance of a declarative sentence) but is not performative.
• Example:
1.“I promise to repay you tomorrow”.
2.‘John promised to repay me tomorrow’.
• 1.‘I promise to repay you tomorrow’
..is performative because in saying it the speaker actually does
what the utterance describes, i.e. he promises to repay the hearer
the next day. That is, the utterance both describes and is a
promise.
• 2.‘John promised to repay me tomorrow’
Although it describes a promise, is not itself a promise. So this
utterance does not simultaneously do what it describes, and is
therefore not a performative.
• Examples: (act or performative):
• 1.“I warn you not to come any closer”
(act of warning / performative utterance)
• 2.I admit that I took 50p from the coffee money
(act of admitting that he took the money/performative)
• 3.I’m trying to get this box open with a screwdriver’
(act of trying to open a box with a screwdriver /Performative)
Example:
• ‘I’m trying to get this box open with a screwdriver’
A constative utterance, because it makes an assertion about a
particular state of affairs, but is not performative, i.e. the
utterance does not simultaneously describe and perform the
same act.
Performative (P) Vs Constative (C)?
• (1) ‘I name this ship Sohar’
• (2) ‘I believe in the importance of learning a new foreign
language at early childhood stages’
• (3) ‘I admit I was driving fast’
• (4) ‘I think I was wrong’
• (5) ‘I hereby inform you that you are chosen for giving a
presentation next week’
• (6) ‘I write your homework every day’
A performative verb
• A performative verb is one which, when used in a simple
positive present tense sentence, with a 1st person singular
subject, can make the utterance of that sentence performative.
• Example:
• I promise . . .’, ‘I admit . . .’, ‘I congratulate . . .’, etc.
• Example:
• Sentence is a performative verb because, for example, ‘I
sentence you to be hanged by the neck’ is a performative
utterance.
• Punish is not a performative verb because, for example, ‘I
punish you’ is not a performative utterance.
• Note that although some verbs describe acts carried out in
speech, they are not therefore necessarily performative
(argue / warn)
• Performative utterances contain a performative verb, and
many have 1st person singular subjects and are in the present
tense. But there are exceptions to this pattern.
Examples:
• 1.‘You are hereby forbidden to leave this room’
• 2.‘All passengers on flight number forty-seven are requested
to proceed to gate ten’
• 3. ‘We thank you for the compliment you have paid us’.
• The most reliable test to determine whether an utterance is
performative is to insert the adverbial word hereby
immediately before the verb and see if the modified utterance
is acceptable. If a sentence can be accompanied by hereby
without seeming odd, then the utterance of that sentence (in
normal circumstances) constitutes a performative utterance.
Examples:
• 1.‘I (……… ) give notice that I will lock these doors in sixty
seconds’
• 2. ‘Hayyak users are (………. ) reminded that their subscription
expires on April 4th’
• 3.‘I (……….. ) warn you not to talk to my sister again’
Activity: Indicate whether the following sentences are (odd / not
odd):
• (1) I hereby warn you that you will fail
• (2) They hereby warn her that she will fail
• (3) I hereby promised him that I would be at the station at three
o’clock
• (4) The management hereby warn customers that mistakes in
change cannot be rectified once the customer has left the counter
• (5) Spitting is hereby forbidden
• (6) I hereby sing
References:
Hurford, J. R., Heasley, B., & Smith, M. B. (2007). Semantics: a
coursebook. Cambridge university press.

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...
Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...
Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...
Ijaz Ahmed
 
06 speech act and event for students
06 speech act and event for students06 speech act and event for students
06 speech act and event for students
gadis pratiwi
 
Eugene nida presentation
Eugene nida presentationEugene nida presentation
Eugene nida presentation
Paula Andrea
 
Pragmatics presupposition and entailnment
Pragmatics presupposition and entailnmentPragmatics presupposition and entailnment
Pragmatics presupposition and entailnment
phannguyen161
 
03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)
03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)
03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)
gadis pratiwi
 
02 deixis and distance
02 deixis and distance02 deixis and distance
02 deixis and distance
gadis pratiwi
 

Tendances (20)

Reference And Inference By Dr.Shadia.Pptx
Reference And Inference  By Dr.Shadia.PptxReference And Inference  By Dr.Shadia.Pptx
Reference And Inference By Dr.Shadia.Pptx
 
Logic
LogicLogic
Logic
 
Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...
Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...
Pragmatics presentation presupposition prepared by Mr. Ijaz Ahmed MPhil Schol...
 
Entailment of truth conditions
Entailment of truth conditionsEntailment of truth conditions
Entailment of truth conditions
 
The Brief of SEMANTICS
The Brief of SEMANTICSThe Brief of SEMANTICS
The Brief of SEMANTICS
 
Semantics session 10_17_11-2021 Meaning postulates in linguistic semanticist’...
Semantics session 10_17_11-2021 Meaning postulates in linguistic semanticist’...Semantics session 10_17_11-2021 Meaning postulates in linguistic semanticist’...
Semantics session 10_17_11-2021 Meaning postulates in linguistic semanticist’...
 
PREDICATOR, PREDICATE, AND DEGREE OF PREDICATES
PREDICATOR, PREDICATE, AND DEGREE OF PREDICATESPREDICATOR, PREDICATE, AND DEGREE OF PREDICATES
PREDICATOR, PREDICATE, AND DEGREE OF PREDICATES
 
06 speech act and event for students
06 speech act and event for students06 speech act and event for students
06 speech act and event for students
 
Eugene nida presentation
Eugene nida presentationEugene nida presentation
Eugene nida presentation
 
The role of context in interpretation
The role of context in interpretationThe role of context in interpretation
The role of context in interpretation
 
Pragmatics presupposition and entailnment
Pragmatics presupposition and entailnmentPragmatics presupposition and entailnment
Pragmatics presupposition and entailnment
 
Implicature
ImplicatureImplicature
Implicature
 
Presupposition and Entailment
Presupposition and EntailmentPresupposition and Entailment
Presupposition and Entailment
 
Semantics
SemanticsSemantics
Semantics
 
Implicatures
ImplicaturesImplicatures
Implicatures
 
Reference & Inference
Reference & InferenceReference & Inference
Reference & Inference
 
Presupposition
PresuppositionPresupposition
Presupposition
 
03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)
03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)
03 reference and inference (salinan berkonflik gadis pratiwi 2013 12-24)
 
Pragmatics - George Yule
Pragmatics - George YulePragmatics - George Yule
Pragmatics - George Yule
 
02 deixis and distance
02 deixis and distance02 deixis and distance
02 deixis and distance
 

Similaire à Semantics Session 11_22_11_2021 Interpersonal meaning Speech Acts.pdf

06 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp02
06 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp0206 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp02
06 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp02
moh supardi
 
Rzeszov ling pragmatics
Rzeszov ling pragmatics Rzeszov ling pragmatics
Rzeszov ling pragmatics
云珍 邓
 

Similaire à Semantics Session 11_22_11_2021 Interpersonal meaning Speech Acts.pdf (20)

06 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp02
06 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp0206 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp02
06 20speech-20act-20and-20event-20for-20students-140107183914-phpapp02
 
Interpersonal meaning
Interpersonal meaningInterpersonal meaning
Interpersonal meaning
 
speechacts-161015120100.pdf
speechacts-161015120100.pdfspeechacts-161015120100.pdf
speechacts-161015120100.pdf
 
Speech acts
Speech actsSpeech acts
Speech acts
 
Speech acts
Speech actsSpeech acts
Speech acts
 
eng_429_-_chapter_3_-_discourse_and_pragmatics.pdf
eng_429_-_chapter_3_-_discourse_and_pragmatics.pdfeng_429_-_chapter_3_-_discourse_and_pragmatics.pdf
eng_429_-_chapter_3_-_discourse_and_pragmatics.pdf
 
Pragmatics, the study of language use in
Pragmatics, the study of language use inPragmatics, the study of language use in
Pragmatics, the study of language use in
 
Speech act theory
Speech act theorySpeech act theory
Speech act theory
 
Hxe302 speech acts (1)
Hxe302 speech acts (1)Hxe302 speech acts (1)
Hxe302 speech acts (1)
 
PPT_week_Speech_Acts.ppt
PPT_week_Speech_Acts.pptPPT_week_Speech_Acts.ppt
PPT_week_Speech_Acts.ppt
 
Pragmatics
PragmaticsPragmatics
Pragmatics
 
SPEECH ACT THEORY.pptx
SPEECH ACT THEORY.pptxSPEECH ACT THEORY.pptx
SPEECH ACT THEORY.pptx
 
Discourse analysis session 8_23_11_2021 Speech acts.pdf
Discourse analysis session 8_23_11_2021 Speech acts.pdfDiscourse analysis session 8_23_11_2021 Speech acts.pdf
Discourse analysis session 8_23_11_2021 Speech acts.pdf
 
Class on Discourse Analysis
Class on Discourse AnalysisClass on Discourse Analysis
Class on Discourse Analysis
 
Lesson 8
Lesson 8Lesson 8
Lesson 8
 
Lecture8-utterance meaning.ppt
Lecture8-utterance meaning.pptLecture8-utterance meaning.ppt
Lecture8-utterance meaning.ppt
 
Oral-Communication_Unit-6_Lesson-3_Illocution-1 (2).pptx
Oral-Communication_Unit-6_Lesson-3_Illocution-1 (2).pptxOral-Communication_Unit-6_Lesson-3_Illocution-1 (2).pptx
Oral-Communication_Unit-6_Lesson-3_Illocution-1 (2).pptx
 
Context clues
Context cluesContext clues
Context clues
 
Semantics session 3_18_10_2021 Sentence, Utterance and proposition.pdf
Semantics session 3_18_10_2021 Sentence, Utterance and proposition.pdfSemantics session 3_18_10_2021 Sentence, Utterance and proposition.pdf
Semantics session 3_18_10_2021 Sentence, Utterance and proposition.pdf
 
Rzeszov ling pragmatics
Rzeszov ling pragmatics Rzeszov ling pragmatics
Rzeszov ling pragmatics
 

Plus de Dr.Badriya Al Mamari

Plus de Dr.Badriya Al Mamari (20)

Semantics: Sense reference and universal discourse.pdf
Semantics: Sense reference and universal discourse.pdfSemantics: Sense reference and universal discourse.pdf
Semantics: Sense reference and universal discourse.pdf
 
Semantics_types of sentences_ Explanation.pdf
Semantics_types of sentences_ Explanation.pdfSemantics_types of sentences_ Explanation.pdf
Semantics_types of sentences_ Explanation.pdf
 
Semantics Session 12_01_12_2021 Non-literal meaning.pdf
Semantics Session 12_01_12_2021 Non-literal meaning.pdfSemantics Session 12_01_12_2021 Non-literal meaning.pdf
Semantics Session 12_01_12_2021 Non-literal meaning.pdf
 
Semantics Session 9_15_11_2021 Word Meaning.pdf
Semantics Session 9_15_11_2021 Word Meaning.pdfSemantics Session 9_15_11_2021 Word Meaning.pdf
Semantics Session 9_15_11_2021 Word Meaning.pdf
 
Semantics session 7_8_11_2021 Logic.pdf
Semantics session 7_8_11_2021 Logic.pdfSemantics session 7_8_11_2021 Logic.pdf
Semantics session 7_8_11_2021 Logic.pdf
 
Semantics session 6_27_10_2021.pdf
Semantics session 6_27_10_2021.pdfSemantics session 6_27_10_2021.pdf
Semantics session 6_27_10_2021.pdf
 
Semantics session 5_25_10_2021Referring expressions.pdf
Semantics session 5_25_10_2021Referring expressions.pdfSemantics session 5_25_10_2021Referring expressions.pdf
Semantics session 5_25_10_2021Referring expressions.pdf
 
Semantics session 4_20_10_2021 Reference and Sense.pdf
Semantics session 4_20_10_2021 Reference and Sense.pdfSemantics session 4_20_10_2021 Reference and Sense.pdf
Semantics session 4_20_10_2021 Reference and Sense.pdf
 
Semantics session 2_13_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdf
Semantics session 2_13_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdfSemantics session 2_13_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdf
Semantics session 2_13_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdf
 
Semantics session 1_11_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdf
Semantics session 1_11_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdfSemantics session 1_11_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdf
Semantics session 1_11_10_2021Basic ideas in semantics.pdf
 
Discourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation.pdf
Discourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation.pdfDiscourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation.pdf
Discourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation.pdf
 
Discourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation in Discourse.pdf
Discourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation in Discourse.pdfDiscourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation in Discourse.pdf
Discourse Analysis Session 14_14_12_2021 Intonation in Discourse.pdf
 
Discourse analysis session 12 and 13_07-12_12_2021 Stress and intonation in d...
Discourse analysis session 12 and 13_07-12_12_2021 Stress and intonation in d...Discourse analysis session 12 and 13_07-12_12_2021 Stress and intonation in d...
Discourse analysis session 12 and 13_07-12_12_2021 Stress and intonation in d...
 
Discourse analysis session 10 and 11 _ 05_12_2021 Pragmatics and discourse an...
Discourse analysis session 10 and 11 _ 05_12_2021 Pragmatics and discourse an...Discourse analysis session 10 and 11 _ 05_12_2021 Pragmatics and discourse an...
Discourse analysis session 10 and 11 _ 05_12_2021 Pragmatics and discourse an...
 
Discourse analysis session 9_30_11_2021_cooperative principles.pdf
Discourse analysis session 9_30_11_2021_cooperative principles.pdfDiscourse analysis session 9_30_11_2021_cooperative principles.pdf
Discourse analysis session 9_30_11_2021_cooperative principles.pdf
 
Discourse analysis session 7_14_11_2021 Cohesion.pdf
Discourse analysis session 7_14_11_2021 Cohesion.pdfDiscourse analysis session 7_14_11_2021 Cohesion.pdf
Discourse analysis session 7_14_11_2021 Cohesion.pdf
 
Discourse analysis session 5_6_09_11_2021 Cohesion.pdf
Discourse analysis session 5_6_09_11_2021 Cohesion.pdfDiscourse analysis session 5_6_09_11_2021 Cohesion.pdf
Discourse analysis session 5_6_09_11_2021 Cohesion.pdf
 
Discourse analysis session 4_24_10_2021 Context.pdf
Discourse analysis session 4_24_10_2021 Context.pdfDiscourse analysis session 4_24_10_2021 Context.pdf
Discourse analysis session 4_24_10_2021 Context.pdf
 
Discourse analysis session 3_17_10_2021 Context.pdf
Discourse analysis session 3_17_10_2021 Context.pdfDiscourse analysis session 3_17_10_2021 Context.pdf
Discourse analysis session 3_17_10_2021 Context.pdf
 
Discourse analysis session 2_12_10_2021 Conversation.pdf
Discourse analysis session 2_12_10_2021 Conversation.pdfDiscourse analysis session 2_12_10_2021 Conversation.pdf
Discourse analysis session 2_12_10_2021 Conversation.pdf
 

Dernier

Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdfMaking and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Chris Hunter
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
kauryashika82
 
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
MateoGardella
 
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactBeyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
PECB
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
heathfieldcps1
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
ciinovamais
 

Dernier (20)

Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activityParis 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
Paris 2024 Olympic Geographies - an activity
 
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdfMaking and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
Making and Justifying Mathematical Decisions.pdf
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
 
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptxICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
 
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptxSOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
 
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
 
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
 
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdfClass 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
 
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"
 
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
 
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
 
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writingfourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
fourth grading exam for kindergarten in writing
 
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeMeasures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
 
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactBeyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
 
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across SectorsAPM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
 
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 

Semantics Session 11_22_11_2021 Interpersonal meaning Speech Acts.pdf

  • 1. Department of English Language and Literature Major: English Language and Literature Semantics Session 12 Interpersonal meaning : Speech Acts Dr. Badriya Al Mamari Academic year 2021/2022
  • 2. A speech act In linguistics, a speech act is an utterance defined in terms of a speaker's intention and the effect it has on a listener. Essentially, it is the action that the speaker hopes to provoke in his or her audience. Speech acts might be requests, warnings, promises, apologies, greetings, or any number of declarations.
  • 3. An Act of Assertation An ACT of ASSERTION is carried out when a speaker utters a declarative sentence (which can be either true or false), and undertakes a certain responsibility, or commitment, to the hearer, that a particular state of affairs, or situation, exists in the world.
  • 4. Example: ‘Simon is in the kitchen’, I assert to my hearer that in the real world a situation exists in which a person named Simon is in a room identified by the referring expression the kitchen. • According to semanticists there was not much more to the meanings of sentences (and utterances) than this kind of correspondence between sentences (and utterances) and the world. This view has been called the Descriptive Fallacy. • The DESCRIPTIVE FALLACY is the view that the sole purpose of making assertions is to DESCRIBE some state of affairs.
  • 5. • Examples: Are the following assertions describing some existing state of affairs in the world?? 1.There is a wasp in your left ear’ 2.‘Someone has broken the space-bar on my laptop’ 3.‘This gun is loaded’ 4.‘You are a fool’ 5.‘I love you’
  • 6. • Answers: 1.To warn the hearer of danger of being stung by an insect or being shocked… 2. To complain about the damage, or to apologize for breaking the space bar of the laptop , etc. 3. To warn during an armed robbery, or during a weapon- training lesson, etc. 4.To insult the hearer, or to tease him, etc. 5.To please the hearer or make them feel better…
  • 7. • Warning, shocking, complaining, apologizing, insulting, reassuring, etc. are all acts. • They are all things that we DO, using language. • An important part of the meaning of utterances is what speakers DO by uttering them. • Acts such as teasing, insulting, etc. are aspects of utterance meaning and not of sentence meaning.
  • 8. Example: What does the following utterance mean? • There’s a piece of fish on the table.
  • 9. • (1) Could this sentence be uttered as a means of complaining to a waiter in a restaurant that a table had not been cleared properly? • (2) Could it, in other circumstances, be uttered to warn one’s husband or wife not to let the cat in the kitchen? • (3) Could it, in still other circumstances, be uttered to reassure one’s husband or wife that his or her lunch has not been forgotten? • (4) Could it, in a different situation, be used to incriminate a child who had raided the refrigerator? • One sentence can generally be uttered to perform a wide variety of different acts, depending on who utters it and where, when, and why it is uttered.
  • 10. Performed utterance Examples: • (1) Can you congratulate someone by a pat on the back, or a hug? • (2) Can you congratulate someone by uttering ‘Well done’? • (3) Can you bid at an auction by nodding? • (4) Can you bid at an auction by saying ‘Eleven pounds’? • (5) Can you promise someone something by a nod? • (6) Can you promise someone something with an utterance beginning ‘I promise . . .’?
  • 11. • A large number of acts, then, can be performed either by means of an utterance or by some other means such as gesture, or by making an appropriate utterance (hug… nodding…. I promise…11 pounds….etc.)
  • 12. A performative utterance vs Constative utterance • a performative utterance is one that actually describes the act that it performs, i.e. it performs some act and simultaneously describes that act. • a constative utterance is one which makes an assertion (i.e. it is often the utterance of a declarative sentence) but is not performative.
  • 13. • Example: 1.“I promise to repay you tomorrow”. 2.‘John promised to repay me tomorrow’.
  • 14. • 1.‘I promise to repay you tomorrow’ ..is performative because in saying it the speaker actually does what the utterance describes, i.e. he promises to repay the hearer the next day. That is, the utterance both describes and is a promise. • 2.‘John promised to repay me tomorrow’ Although it describes a promise, is not itself a promise. So this utterance does not simultaneously do what it describes, and is therefore not a performative.
  • 15. • Examples: (act or performative): • 1.“I warn you not to come any closer” (act of warning / performative utterance) • 2.I admit that I took 50p from the coffee money (act of admitting that he took the money/performative) • 3.I’m trying to get this box open with a screwdriver’ (act of trying to open a box with a screwdriver /Performative)
  • 16. Example: • ‘I’m trying to get this box open with a screwdriver’ A constative utterance, because it makes an assertion about a particular state of affairs, but is not performative, i.e. the utterance does not simultaneously describe and perform the same act.
  • 17. Performative (P) Vs Constative (C)? • (1) ‘I name this ship Sohar’ • (2) ‘I believe in the importance of learning a new foreign language at early childhood stages’ • (3) ‘I admit I was driving fast’ • (4) ‘I think I was wrong’ • (5) ‘I hereby inform you that you are chosen for giving a presentation next week’ • (6) ‘I write your homework every day’
  • 18. A performative verb • A performative verb is one which, when used in a simple positive present tense sentence, with a 1st person singular subject, can make the utterance of that sentence performative. • Example: • I promise . . .’, ‘I admit . . .’, ‘I congratulate . . .’, etc.
  • 19. • Example: • Sentence is a performative verb because, for example, ‘I sentence you to be hanged by the neck’ is a performative utterance. • Punish is not a performative verb because, for example, ‘I punish you’ is not a performative utterance. • Note that although some verbs describe acts carried out in speech, they are not therefore necessarily performative (argue / warn)
  • 20. • Performative utterances contain a performative verb, and many have 1st person singular subjects and are in the present tense. But there are exceptions to this pattern. Examples: • 1.‘You are hereby forbidden to leave this room’ • 2.‘All passengers on flight number forty-seven are requested to proceed to gate ten’ • 3. ‘We thank you for the compliment you have paid us’.
  • 21. • The most reliable test to determine whether an utterance is performative is to insert the adverbial word hereby immediately before the verb and see if the modified utterance is acceptable. If a sentence can be accompanied by hereby without seeming odd, then the utterance of that sentence (in normal circumstances) constitutes a performative utterance. Examples: • 1.‘I (……… ) give notice that I will lock these doors in sixty seconds’ • 2. ‘Hayyak users are (………. ) reminded that their subscription expires on April 4th’ • 3.‘I (……….. ) warn you not to talk to my sister again’
  • 22. Activity: Indicate whether the following sentences are (odd / not odd): • (1) I hereby warn you that you will fail • (2) They hereby warn her that she will fail • (3) I hereby promised him that I would be at the station at three o’clock • (4) The management hereby warn customers that mistakes in change cannot be rectified once the customer has left the counter • (5) Spitting is hereby forbidden • (6) I hereby sing
  • 23. References: Hurford, J. R., Heasley, B., & Smith, M. B. (2007). Semantics: a coursebook. Cambridge university press.