Abstract
This paper offers the first empirical and theoretical account of an NP construction referred to as that noun thing (TNT) in English. I argue that the construction is a Langackerian reference point construction, with the basic use of referring in situations in which speakers find it difficult to characterize the referent in question. I also show that speakers systematically rely on this relational means of referring in specific contexts to convey a range of Gricean conversational implicatures such as speaker disapproval, which are above and beyond the conventional meaning of the construction. The TNT thus offers a clear space from which to view the interplay of conventional meaning in cognitive and construction grammars with classic Gricean pragmatics.
©2015 by De Gruyter Mouton
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Dative constructions and givenness in the speech of four-year-olds
- Conversational implicatures, reference point constructions, and that noun thing
- Four types of evidentiality in the native languages of Brazil
- Prosodic parallelism explaining morphophonological variation in German
- Doubling up: Two upper bounds for scalars
- Historical development of labile verbs in modern Russian
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Dative constructions and givenness in the speech of four-year-olds
- Conversational implicatures, reference point constructions, and that noun thing
- Four types of evidentiality in the native languages of Brazil
- Prosodic parallelism explaining morphophonological variation in German
- Doubling up: Two upper bounds for scalars
- Historical development of labile verbs in modern Russian