Relevance and Linguistic Meaning(1), LANGUAGE INFO

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Relevance and Linguistic Meaning
Theimportanceofdiscoursemarkers(wordssuchas‘so’,‘however’and‘well’)
lies in the theoretical questions they raise about the nature of discourse and
the relationship between linguistic meaning and context. They are regarded
as central to semantics because they raise problems for standard theories of
meaning, and to pragmatics because they seem to play a role in the way
discourse is understood. In this new and important study, Diane Blakemore
argues that attempts to analyse these expressions within standard semantic
frameworks raise even more problems, while their analysis as expressions that
link segments of discourse has led to an unproductive and confusing exercise
in classification. She concludes that the exercise in classification that has dom-
inated discourse marker research should be replaced by the investigation of
the way in which linguistic expressions contribute to the inferential processes
involved in utterance understanding.
DIANE BLAKEMORE
is Professor of Linguistics at the European Studies
Research Institute and School of Languages, University of Salford. She is
the author of
Semantic Constraints on Relevance
(1987) and
Understanding
Utterances
(1992), as well as a range of articles in relevance-theoretic pragmat-
ics in publications including
Journal of Linguistics, Lingua, Pragmatics and
Cognition
and
Linguistics and Philosophy
.
CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN LINGUISTICS
General Editors:
P
.
AUSTIN
,
J
.
BRESNAN
,
B
.
COMRIE
,
W
.
DRESSLER
,
C
.
J
.
EWEN
,
R
.
LASS
,
D
.
LIGHTFOOT
,
I
.
ROBERTS
,
S
.
ROMAINE
,
N
.
V
.
SMITH
In this series
62
STEPHEN R
.
ANDERSON
:
A-Morphous morphology
63
LESLEY STIRLING
:
Switch reference and discourse representation
64
HENK J
.
VERKUYL
:
Atheory of aspectuality: the interaction between temporal and
atemporal structure
65
EVE V
.
CLARK
:
The lexicon in acquisition
66
ANTHONY R
.
WARNER
:
English auxiliaries: structure and history
67
P
.
H
.
MATTHEWS
:
Grammatical theory in the United States from Bloomfield to Chomsky
68
LJILJANA PROGOVAC
:
Negative and positive polarity: a binding approach
69
R
.
M
.
W
.
DIXON
:
Ergativity
70
YAN HUANG
:
The syntax and pragmatics of anaphora
71
KNUD LAMBRECHT
:
Information structure and sentence form: topic, focus, and the
mental representations of discourse referents
72
LUIGI BURZIO
:
Principles of English stress
73
JOHN A
.
HAWKINS
:
Aperformance theory of order and constituency
74
ALICE C
.
HARRIS
and
LYLE CAMPBELL
:
Historical syntax in cross-linguistic
perspective
75
LILIANE HAEGEMAN
:
The syntax of negation
76
PAUL GORRELL
:
Syntax and parsing
77
GUGLIELMO CINQUE
:
Italian syntax and universal grammar
78
HENRY SMITH
:
Restrictiveness in case theory
79
D
.
ROBERT LADD
:
Intonational phonology
80
ANDREA MORO
:
The raising of predicates: predicative noun phrases and the theory of
clause structure
81
ROGER LASS
:
Historical linguistics and language change
82
JOHN M
.
ANDERSON
:
Anotional theory of syntactic categories
83
BERND HEINE
:
Possession: cognitive sources, forces and grammaticalization
84
NOMI ERTESCHIK
-
SHIR
:
The dynamics of focus structure
85
JOHN COLEMAN
:
Phonological representations: their names, forms and powers
86
CHRISTINA Y
.
BETHIN
:
Slavic prosody: language change and phonological theory
87
BARBARA DANCYGIER
:
Conditionals and prediction: time, knowledge and causation in
conditional constructions
88
CLAIRE LEFEBVRE
:
Creole genesis and the acquisition of grammar: the case of Haitian
Creole
89
HEINZ GIEGERICH
:
Lexical strata in English: morphological causes, phonological effects
90
KEREN RICE
:
Morpheme order and semantic scope: word formation and the Athapaskan
verb
91
A
.
M
.
S
.
MCMAHON
:
Lexical phonology and the history of English
92
MATTHEW Y
.
CHEN
:
Tone sandhi: patterns across Chinese dialects
93
GREGORY T
.
STUMP
:
Inflectional morphology: a theory of paradigm structure
94
JOAN BYBEE
:
Phonology and language use
95
LAURIE BAUER
:
Morphological productivity
96
THOMAS ERNST
:
The syntax of adjuncts
97
ELIZABETH CLOSS TRAUGOTT
and
RICHARD B
.
DASHER
:
Regularity in semantic
change
98
MAYA HICKMANN
:
Children’s discourse: person, space and time across languages
99
DIANE BLAKEMORE
:
Relevance and linguistic meaning: the semantics and pragmatics of
discourse markers
Earlier issues not listed are also available
RELEVANCE AND
LINGUISTIC MEANING
The semantics and pragmatics
of discourse markers
DIANE BLAKEMORE
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