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Irregular Negatives, Implicatures, and Idioms

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The author integrates, expands, and deepens his previous publications about irregular (or "metalinguistic") negations.  A total of ten distinct negatives-several previously unclassified-are analyzed.  The logically irregular negations deny different implicatures of their root.  All are partially non-compositional but completely conventional.
The author argues that two of the irregular negative meanings are implicatures.  The others are semantically rather than pragmatically ambiguous.  Since their ambiguity is neither lexical nor structural, direct irregular negatives satisfy the standard definition of idioms as syntactically complex expressions whose meaning is non-compositional.  Unlike stereotypical idioms, idiomatic negatives lack fixed syntactic forms and are highly compositional.  The final chapter analyzes other "free form" idioms, including irregular interrogatives and comparatives, self-restricted verb phrases, numerical verb phrases, and transparent propositional attitude and speech act reports.

List of contents

Preface.- Chapter 1. Irregular Negatives.- Chapter 2. Implicature.- Chapter 3. Irregular Negative Conventions.- Chapter 4. Implicature Theories.- Chapter 5. Pragmatic Explicature Theories.- Chapter 6. Free-Form Idiom Theory.- Chapter 7. Other Free-Form Idioms.

Summary

The author integrates, expands, and deepens his previous publications about irregular (or “metalinguistic”) negations.  A total of ten distinct negatives—several previously unclassified—are analyzed.  The logically irregular negations deny different implicatures of their root.  All are partially non-compositional but completely conventional.
The author argues that two of the irregular negative meanings are implicatures.  The others are semantically rather than pragmatically ambiguous.  Since their ambiguity is neither lexical nor structural, direct irregular negatives satisfy the standard definition of idioms as syntactically complex expressions whose meaning is non-compositional.  Unlike stereotypical idioms, idiomatic negatives lack fixed syntactic forms and are highly compositional.  The final chapter analyzes other “free form” idioms, including irregular interrogatives and comparatives, self-restricted verb phrases, numerical verb phrases, and transparent propositional attitude and speech act reports.

Product details

Authors Wayne A Davis, Wayne A. Davis
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.05.2018
 
EAN 9789402413762
ISBN 978-94-0-241376-2
No. of pages 317
Dimensions 157 mm x 235 mm x 18 mm
Weight 528 g
Illustrations XVIII, 317 p. 7 illus.
Series Perspectives in Pragmatics, Philosophy & Psychology
Perspectives in Pragmatics, Ph
Perspectives in Pragmatics, Philosophy & Psychology
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

Sprachphilosophie, B, Philosophy of Language, Linguistics, Social Sciences, Semiotics, Language and languages—Philosophy, Semantics, relevance theory

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