Pragmatics LING001 10/17/2016

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Pragmatics LING001 10/17/2016

Meaning in Language Semantics: Study of literal meaning of words and sentences. First, a (very) brief review. Pragmatics: Study of intended (speaker) meaning. Speech acts Conversational implicature

Semantics, Quick Review Semantic meaning = literal meaning of words and sentences. We can understand the meaning of a sentence that we ve never heard before, e.g. An adventurous armadillo googled the origin of the internet. To know the meaning of this sentence is knowing what the world would have to look like in order for the sentence to be true..

Semantics, Quick Review Semantic meaning is rule governed Computed from the meaning of individual words & morphemes + compositional rules of the grammar: Blue trainer : Adj + N = NP

Pragmatics Pragmatics: Study of intended (speaker) meaning. Speech acts Conversational implicature

Speech Acts People don t just use language to state facts. Rather, use language for a number of communicative goals. Speech Acts : roughly, what we do with language.

Speech Acts 1. ASSERTION : John likes cats. 2. QUESTION : Does John like cats? 3. ORDER/REQUEST: Be nice to your cat! Attested in most of the worlds languages.

Speech Acts Three basic types of direct speech acts + corresponding syntax: Speech Act (Pragmatics) Syntactic Construction Example Assertion Declarative John likes cats. Question Interrogative Does John like cats? Order/Request Imperative Be nice to your cat!

Speech Acts Corresponding indirect speech acts, with syntactic embedding: Speech Act Syntax Example Indirect Assertion Indirect Question Indirect Order/Request Embedded Declarative Embedded Interrogative Embedded Imperative Why use indirect speech acts? I said that John likes cats. I asked if/whether John likes cats? I told you to be nice to your cat.

Speech Acts Politeness: Pass the salt. vs. Would you mind passing the salt? Expressing uncertainty / source of evidence: You ll do well on your test tomorrow. vs. I m sure you ll do well on your test tomorrow. It s going to snow tomorrow. vs. I heard from John that it s going to snow tomorrow. --- Main point of utterance: it s going to snow. --- This claim is only as good as the reported source of evidence (John s word) Shows us that speaker meaning, and it s interaction with the syntax, is more complex than just stating facts and requesting information...

Pragmatics Pragmatics: Study of intended (speaker) meaning. Speech acts Conversational implicature

Speaker meaning is not just complex, It s also systematic and (to some extent) predictable, given a set of conversational principles.

A classic example: John: Will Mary be at the meeting this afternoon? Lisa: Her car broke down. How is Lisa s statement answering John s question?

How is Lisa s statement answering John s question? John: Will Mary be at the meeting this afternoon? Lisa: Her car broke down. Literal meaning (John utters): α = M s car broke down. Inferred meaning (Lisa understands): β = M won t be at the meeting. Question: How do we get from α to β? (Uniform inference!)

John: Will Mary be at the meeting this afternoon? Lisa: Her car broke down = α : Mary s car broke down. β : Mary won t be at the meeting. How does Lisa get to β from hearing John utter α? Through some rather complex reasoning: L infers that J doesn t know for sure that M won t be at the meeting (or he would have said so by answering her question directly). However, J knows---and offers the information, that M s car has broken down, and thus, that M probably won t have any way of getting to the meeting. Thus, L infers that J thinks that M won t be at the meeting.

Fortunately for us linguists, we can model this reasoning! Using Grice s (1975) theory of how implicatures arise = how speaker meaning is calculated from sentence meaning.

Grice s theory of how implicatures are calculated: A. The Cooperative Principle: The assumption that speakers customarily adhere to, and assume that their interlocutors also adhere to, the following rules (or maxims) of conversation: 1. Quantity: give the right amount of information; 2. Quality: try to say only what is true; 3. Relevance: make what you say relevant to the topic at hand; 4. Manner: be clear (or, say things in a way that makes sense).

Grice s theory of how implicatures are calculated: B. From the interaction of the following 3 factors: 1. The literal meaning of the sentence uttered. 2. Possibly certain features of the context. 3. The assumption that the speaker is obeying the rules of conversation, i.e. the Cooperative Principle. Let s look at a few examples!

The Cooperative Principle, Quality in action: A. Tehran s in Turkey, isn t it, teacher? B. And London s in Armenia, I suppose. (Levinson, 1983) Literal meaning : London is in Armenia. (Which is false) Reasoning from the Cooperative Principle: 1. B is flouting (i.e. blatantly violating) the assumption of Quality: 2. B draws a comparison between A s question of whether Tehran is in Turkey, and the obviously false statement London is in Armenia. 3. Thus, B is implying that A s question is clearly false.

The Cooperative Principle, Quantity in action: A. Do you have 10 bucks that I can borrow? B. I have 9. Literal meaning : B has 9 dollars. (Compatible with B having $10.) Reasoning from the Cooperative Principle: 1. A assumes that if B is cooperative and gives the right amount (quantity) of information, given A s question. 2. I.e. if B had had 10 dollars, B should have said so (being cooperative). 3. However, B didn t say I have 10. Hence, A infers that B only has 9.

The Cooperative Principle, Relevance in action: A. Where is the roast beef? B. Well, the puppy sure looks happy. Literal meaning : The puppy looks happy. Reasoning from the Cooperative Principle: 1. A assumes that if B is cooperative and provides relevant information in order to answer A s question. 2. A infers that the reason that the dog s happiness is relevant to the question of the whereabouts of the roast beef, is that the dog ate the roast beef.

The Cooperative Principle, Manner in action: A. What happened? B. When the dog came in, the cat left. Literal meaning : The dog came in and the cat left, at apx. the same time. Reasoning from the Cooperative Principle: 1. A assumes that B is cooperative and has some reason for mentioning the two events together, in this particular manner. 2. For instance, that the cat left as a result of the dog entering.

Recognizing an implicature: Implicatures (unlike literal meanings) are cancelable and contextdependent.

Cancelability Some of the students passed the test. Implies : not all Entails : at least one We can felicitously cancel the implied meaning: Some of the students passed the test. In fact, they all did. But not the literal (entailed) meaning (gives rise to a contradiction): #Some of the students passed the test. In fact, none of them did.

Context-dependence: A. Where is the roast beef? B. Well, the puppy sure looks happy. The dog looks happy doesn t conventionally mean the puppy ate the roast beef. This meaning only arises in this context, i.e. A s question.

Context-dependence: A. Did the dog toys that we ordered arrive yet? B. Well, the puppy sure looks happy. Different inferences in different contexts!

NB: We don t satisfy these demands all the time. For instance, we might: Violate or opt-out of the Cooperative Principle (e.g. lie), Flout the Cooperative Principle (i.e. blatantly violate, with a communicative purpose).

Subsequent work has developed and criticized aspects of Grice s theory. Nevertheless, the basic idea is still influential, namely that: Speakers calculate the intended meaning of an utterance, based on the literal meaning of the utterance, together with specific assumptions about how people behave in conversation (saying things that are mostly relevant, true, sufficient to get the message across, and so on).

Pragmatics Main focus today: the study of intended (speaker) meaning. Speech acts Conversational implicature Before we conclude: Pragmatics as the study of how we use language to frame events, or make reference to entities in particular, systematic ways.

Pragmatics and sentence-meaning Referring to entities: a. Mary walked into the room. b. A woman walked into the room. c. The woman walked into the room. d. She walked into the room. e. The woman I met at the party walked into the room. f. My doctor walked into the room. The noun phrases in (a)-(f) can all be used to denote the same individual (semantically equivalent). Used to in different contexts/to frame the individual in different ways (pragmatically non-equivalent).

Pragmatics and sentence-meaning Framing events: a. John kicked the ball. b. It was John who kicked the ball. c. The one who kicked the ball was John. d. The ball was kicked by John. The sentences in (a)-(d) all describe the same event (semantically equivalent). Used to in different contexts/to talk about the event in different ways (pragmatically non-equivalent); Not implicatures, since: a. Not cancellable; b. Obligatory, given the compositional rules of the syntax.