This book focuses on a particular type of formulaic expressions called
Situation-Bound Utterances (SBUs). Since the meaning of these
pragmatic units is shaped by the interplay of linguistic and
extralinguistic factors they can be best accounted for in a
theoretical framework which represents a knowledge-for-use conception.
A unique feature of the book is that it examines the development and
use of a particular type of formulae from new perspectives. The
comparison of a monolingual and multilingual approach, and the
application of the graded salience hypothesis to SBUs within a
cognitive-pragmatic theoretical framework reveal that issues such as
the role of context in shaping situational meaning, and the existence
of common or similar cognitive mechanisms and knowledge structures
responsible for cognitive functions and speech behavior in different
languages need revision. As a consequence, the book seeks answer to
two main questions: 1) origin and extent of context-sensitiveness, and
2) the development of the particular situational functions of SBUs. On
the basis of recent research it is argued that context affects
comprehension only after highly salient information has been accessed.
Search for the appropriate meaning stops if the information accessed
initially is compatible with the context, and it continues, if it is
not. This approach puts the issue of context-sensitiveness of SBUs
into an entirely different perspective. It is also discussed that why
exactly these utterances started to be used to express those pragmatic
functions and not others. SBUs demonstrate better than any other
linguistic unit that there is a strong cognitive-linguistic
interdependency. The development of certain SBUs can be accounted for
through cognitive mechanisms, and vice versa: learning an SBU for a
culturally important category can linguistically reinforce the
learning of the category itself. The book uses a cross-linguistic
perspective and illustrative examples from several languages which
makes its arguments and claims convincing.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783110894035
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
De Gruyter
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter