The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 1-2Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 162
... meaning which may have been intended by his interlocutor . Nevertheless , this assumption further sets the problem that it may be questioned how far the addressee is assumed to follow and infer the meaning intended by the speaker , or ...
... meaning which may have been intended by his interlocutor . Nevertheless , this assumption further sets the problem that it may be questioned how far the addressee is assumed to follow and infer the meaning intended by the speaker , or ...
Página 182
... meaning intended by the speaker , the former would fail to do so , and would remain at the literal level , that is , at the level of the codification / decodification of the message . In terms of the notions of context choice and ...
... meaning intended by the speaker , the former would fail to do so , and would remain at the literal level , that is , at the level of the codification / decodification of the message . In terms of the notions of context choice and ...
Página 183
... meaning of irony is not suppressed when the ironic meaning emerges " ( Giora 1998 : 89 ) . The graded salience hypothesis seems to coincide with Sperber and Wilson's views in that , in contrast to the Gricean model , the processing of ...
... meaning of irony is not suppressed when the ironic meaning emerges " ( Giora 1998 : 89 ) . The graded salience hypothesis seems to coincide with Sperber and Wilson's views in that , in contrast to the Gricean model , the processing of ...
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