Beyond unpluggability
-
Uli Sauerland
Abstract
Emotional expressions like damn and bastard seem to bring out the extreme not only in the speakers who use them, but also in the linguists who try to account for them: For Potts, nothing short of a new dimension of meaning can accommodate these expressions. Potts already in earlier work (Potts, 2003) provides one interesting argument for this view: the unpluggability (or nondisplaceability) of these expressions in many cases. Regardless of the position and level of embedding that that damn bastard John occurs in in a sentence, the speaker uttering such a sentence conveys that he, the speaker, does not think all too highly of John. In the present work, Potts still tries to maintain the core of his earlier theory, but slightly retreats from his earlier position accepting examples due to Kratzer and Schlenker where unpluggability is not observed. Potts' interesting work raises two related questions from my perspective: 1) What is the best account for the unpluggability of expressive content? and 2) Is expressive content a uniform phenomenon?
© Walter de Gruyter
Artikel in diesem Heft
- The expressive dimension
- Re-expressing judgment
- Really fucking brilliant
- Filling the emotion gap in linguistic theory: Commentary on Potts' expressive dimension
- Expressives, perspective and presupposition
- Beyond unpluggability
- Expressive presuppositions
- I like that damn paper – Three comments on Christopher Potts' The expressive dimension
- The centrality of expressive indices
Artikel in diesem Heft
- The expressive dimension
- Re-expressing judgment
- Really fucking brilliant
- Filling the emotion gap in linguistic theory: Commentary on Potts' expressive dimension
- Expressives, perspective and presupposition
- Beyond unpluggability
- Expressive presuppositions
- I like that damn paper – Three comments on Christopher Potts' The expressive dimension
- The centrality of expressive indices