Previous approaches to non-illocutionary uses of speech act verbs (SAVs) concentrated on commissive verbs like promise and threaten, claiming that their non-illocutionary uses result from a subjectification process, and that they therefore describe a subjective relation. Some uses of assertive and directive SAVs do not conform to this pattern: they involve a metaphorical projection whose source domain is the basic level of cognitive apprehension where directive speech acts are perceived as manifestations of an internal necessity and assertive speech acts as direct signs of states of affairs. It is argued that subjectification approaches went wrong when characterising non-illocutionary uses of commissive SAVs in purely subjective terms. Non-illocutionary uses of promise and threaten are better accounted for by a metaphorical projection whose source domain is the conceptualisation of commissive speech acts as highly reliable signs of future states of affairs.
© Mouton de Gruyter – Societas Linguistica Europaea
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Compositional and constructional reduplication in Kam-Tai languages
- Metaphorical projection, subjectification and English speech act verbs
- The possessive perfect construction in Estonian
- The semantic field of continuation: Periphrastic blijven and continuer à
- The role of age in Austrians' perceptions of the frequency of use and likeability of lexical Teutonisms and Austriacisms
- Typology meets usage: The case of the prohibitive infinitive in Dutch
- A comprehensive account of full-verb inversion in English
- Book reviews
- Acknowledgements
- Conference announcement
- Publications received
- Index to Volume 44
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Compositional and constructional reduplication in Kam-Tai languages
- Metaphorical projection, subjectification and English speech act verbs
- The possessive perfect construction in Estonian
- The semantic field of continuation: Periphrastic blijven and continuer à
- The role of age in Austrians' perceptions of the frequency of use and likeability of lexical Teutonisms and Austriacisms
- Typology meets usage: The case of the prohibitive infinitive in Dutch
- A comprehensive account of full-verb inversion in English
- Book reviews
- Acknowledgements
- Conference announcement
- Publications received
- Index to Volume 44