The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 1-2Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 168
... utterance , not only does the speaker usually refer to a certain state of affairs , but she also expresses her attitude towards it , and whatever is said is done so with the intention of provoking a certain change either in that state ...
... utterance , not only does the speaker usually refer to a certain state of affairs , but she also expresses her attitude towards it , and whatever is said is done so with the intention of provoking a certain change either in that state ...
Página 179
... utterance- contextual knowledge and other background assumptions — rather than the form or content of the utterance itself " ( Sperber & Wilson 1981 : 301 ) . However , it may be concluded that up to the present moment , some of the key ...
... utterance- contextual knowledge and other background assumptions — rather than the form or content of the utterance itself " ( Sperber & Wilson 1981 : 301 ) . However , it may be concluded that up to the present moment , some of the key ...
Página 183
... utterance and thus also of irony and that if the information provided by the utterance clashes with the contextual assumptions — or what he terms contextual sources — to a greater or lesser extent , then the addressee may have more or ...
... utterance and thus also of irony and that if the information provided by the utterance clashes with the contextual assumptions — or what he terms contextual sources — to a greater or lesser extent , then the addressee may have more or ...
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