Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Discourse & Pragmatics: Cooperative Principles (CP), Maria Renita…
Discourse & Pragmatics: Cooperative Principles (CP)
Cross-cultural pragmatics
adresee
relation of power
social distance between participant
CP: in order to
interpret what another person says
Quality:say what people believe to be true and what they have evidence for
Quantity: our contribution as informative as is required for the particular purpose & not make it moreinformative than is required
Relation: our contribution relevant to the
interaction
Manner: we should be clear in what we say
Flouting the CP
Flouting the maxim: do not observe a maxim but has no intention of deceiving or misleading the other person.
Violating the maxim: likelihood that they are liable to mislead
Conversational
Implicature: a speaker’s intended meaning
Implicature: Generated intentionally by the speaker and may (or may not) be understood by the hearer
Scalar Implicatures: words that express some kind of scale of values.
Types
Conventional Implicatures: no particular context in order to derive the implicature
Particularized Conversational Implicatures: are derived from a particular context, rather than from the use of the words alone
Inference: Produced by a hearer on the basis of certain evidence and may not be the same as what a speaker intends
Maria Renita Wuryanti (20202241017)