This paper focuses on the relationship between illocutions and the lexicon, in particular, illocutions and illocutionary nouns in their function of shell nouns. Theoretical insights from cognitive linguistics, supplemented by an empirical-conceptual approach to verbal communication, are used as a frame of reference. they share the idea that, though conceptualization does not lend itself to observation, it can be studies indirectly via language, as there is a close relationship between linguistic and conceptual structure. In this vein, the semantics-pragmatics of illocutionary shell nouns is relevant to an understanding of illocutions and their conceptualization. The study singles out one type of illocutionary nouns: assertive nouns, i.e. nouns that name assertive speech acts (assertion, allegation, argument, claim, etc.), and presents a corpus-based study of them. It approaches assertive nouns by analyzing their behavioral profile, i.e. the complementation patterns they occur with as they emerge in their occurrence in reporting or denoting and, in so doing, in characterizing specific acts as acts of F-ing. The methodology used involves descriptive as well as exploratory statistics. As for descriptive statistics, reliance scores are calculated and a chi-square test added. As for exploratory statistics, a hierarchical cluster analysis is applied to the data. Results show that (i) constructional possibilities are part of the semantic-pragmatic meaning of the nouns, and (ii) there is a correlation between semantic-pragmatic similarity and distributional similarity. At the same time, they lend argument from linguistics patterns to what philosophy states about the commitment to belief, truth and knowledge that define assertive speech acts, thus showing the potential that English linguistics research has for application across disciplinary boundaries.
Ways of asserting. English assertive nouns between linguistics and the philosophy of language
VERGARO, Carla
2015
Abstract
This paper focuses on the relationship between illocutions and the lexicon, in particular, illocutions and illocutionary nouns in their function of shell nouns. Theoretical insights from cognitive linguistics, supplemented by an empirical-conceptual approach to verbal communication, are used as a frame of reference. they share the idea that, though conceptualization does not lend itself to observation, it can be studies indirectly via language, as there is a close relationship between linguistic and conceptual structure. In this vein, the semantics-pragmatics of illocutionary shell nouns is relevant to an understanding of illocutions and their conceptualization. The study singles out one type of illocutionary nouns: assertive nouns, i.e. nouns that name assertive speech acts (assertion, allegation, argument, claim, etc.), and presents a corpus-based study of them. It approaches assertive nouns by analyzing their behavioral profile, i.e. the complementation patterns they occur with as they emerge in their occurrence in reporting or denoting and, in so doing, in characterizing specific acts as acts of F-ing. The methodology used involves descriptive as well as exploratory statistics. As for descriptive statistics, reliance scores are calculated and a chi-square test added. As for exploratory statistics, a hierarchical cluster analysis is applied to the data. Results show that (i) constructional possibilities are part of the semantic-pragmatic meaning of the nouns, and (ii) there is a correlation between semantic-pragmatic similarity and distributional similarity. At the same time, they lend argument from linguistics patterns to what philosophy states about the commitment to belief, truth and knowledge that define assertive speech acts, thus showing the potential that English linguistics research has for application across disciplinary boundaries.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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