- A
perlocutionary act (or
perlocutionary effect) is the
effect of an
utterance on an interlocutor.
Examples of
perlocutionary acts
include persuading, convincing...
-
locution is what was said and meant,
illocution is what was done, and
perlocution is what
happened as a result. When
somebody says "Is
there any salt?"...
-
performed by
saying something.
Notice that if one
successfully performs a
perlocution, one also
succeeds in
performing both an
illocution and a locution. In...
- with
locution (locutionary act),
illocution (illocutionary act) and
perlocution (perlocutionary act) in
speech act theory. The term
metalocutionary act...
- of
utterances into
three distinct parts: locutions,
illocutions and
perlocutions. His
pupil John
Searle developed the idea
under the
label "speech acts"...
-
person accepts it (illocution), and many
other people act
accordingly (
perlocution),
reality will have been
constituted by this
speech act. This may be...
- to the locution, e.g. questioning, ****erting, promising, etc.), and "
perlocutions" (the
goals that the
author hopes to
accomplish through the text). Among...