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26 Pragmatics

  • Elizabeth Bogal-Allbritten
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Abstract

Pragmatics is the study of the interaction between language and the contexts in which it is used. This chapter focuses on three areas of pragmatics that have been enriched by the study of Indigenous languages of North America. First, conversational implicatures, which are aspects of meaning that are suggested when a sentence is used in a particular context and which go beyond the sentence’s literal meaning. Second, the linguistic conventions that speakers use to signal politeness. Third, presuppositions, which are the background assumptions that must hold in order for certain expressions or constructions to make sense in the context. The relevance of pragmatics for language revitalization and documentation projects is also discussed.

Abstract

Pragmatics is the study of the interaction between language and the contexts in which it is used. This chapter focuses on three areas of pragmatics that have been enriched by the study of Indigenous languages of North America. First, conversational implicatures, which are aspects of meaning that are suggested when a sentence is used in a particular context and which go beyond the sentence’s literal meaning. Second, the linguistic conventions that speakers use to signal politeness. Third, presuppositions, which are the background assumptions that must hold in order for certain expressions or constructions to make sense in the context. The relevance of pragmatics for language revitalization and documentation projects is also discussed.

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