-
development of
performative utterances and his
theory of locutionary,
illocutionary, and
perlocutionary acts.
Speech acts
serve their function once they...
- The
concept of
illocutionary acts was
introduced into
linguistics by the
philosopher J. L.
Austin in his
investigation of the
various aspects of speech...
- to give his
account of
illocutionary acts.
There he
provides an
analysis of what he
considers the
prototypical illocutionary act of
promising and offers...
- "ethical" propositions), he
introduces "performative"
sentences or
illocutionary act as
another instance. In
order to
define performatives,
Austin refers...
- language. In the
subfield of pragmatics,
questions are
regarded as
illocutionary acts
which raise an
issue to be
resolved in discourse. In approaches...
-
performance of an utterance, and is one of the
types of force, in
addition to
illocutionary act and
perlocutionary act,
typically cited in
Speech Act Theory. Speech...
-
locutionary act,
which is the act of
producing the utterance, and with the
illocutionary force,
which does not
depend on the utterance's
effect on the interlocutor...
- kind of
action Austin has in mind is what he
subsequently terms the
illocutionary act). For example, if you say "I name this ship the
Queen Elizabeth"...
- In linguistics, an
intensifier (abbreviated INT) is a
lexical category (but not a
traditional part of speech) for a
modifier that
makes no contribution...
- many parti****nts in
ordinary moral discourse are
frustrated in
their illocutionary act intentions. On
these grounds it is
argued that we
should give up...