1 / 11

Language in Use Pragmatics Natural and conventional signs Prof. Walid Amer

Language in Use Pragmatics Natural and conventional signs Prof. Walid Amer. Pragmatics: a branch of linguistics that is concerned with meaning. What is correct in a particular instance is pragmatically appropriate. Pragmatics and Semantics:

seldon
Télécharger la présentation

Language in Use Pragmatics Natural and conventional signs Prof. Walid Amer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Language in Use Pragmatics Natural and conventional signs Prof. Walid Amer

  2. Pragmatics: a branch of linguistics that is concerned with meaning. What is correct in a particular instance is pragmatically appropriate.

  3. Pragmatics and Semantics: They are different aspects of the same general study. Both are concerned with people’s ability to use language meaningfully. Semantics:is concerned with a speaker’s competence to produce meaningful utterances. Pragmatics:is concerned with a person’s ability to derive meanings from speech situations.

  4. Natural and conventional signs: Language: a complex system of symbols or signs that are shared by members of a community. Dialects: consistent differences in speech of a certain language that people who have the same native language use. Vocabulary differences: Petrol vs gasoline, Lift vs elevator Ways of framing certain questions: Have you a pencil? vs Do you have a pencil? vs Have you got a pencil? Cultural features are almost always more widespread than any one language.

  5. Natural signs: it’s a natural unintentional sign that communicates a message. Footprint: it’s the natural result of a foot treading on a soft surface. It communicates a message that someone was recently there. Other examples: Smoke, black clouds, and all sorts of sights, sounds, and smells.

  6. Conventional signs: It’s like horns, whistles, siren, buzzes and bells. Also visual signs like signs to indicate a slippery road, or a bicycle path, etc. Humans produce not only single symbols but systems of symbols. For example, different bell tones can form a repertory of messages. Conventional signs have human senders as well as human receivers. The message can be personal or impersonal.

  7. The process of getting information consists of three types: 1. Perception: The sign attracts the observer’s attention, so the observer sees or hears something. For example, in this stage, a person hears some sound, or reads something, or sees a certain image.

  8. 2. Identification: When we recognize the phenomenon that we have a previous experience about, that is stored in our memories. We observe a sign and derive some meaning from it. This means that we have seen a similar sign before.

  9. 3. Interpretation: To interpret the meaning of a sign and form a reaction to it. Meanings are often personal, that depends on the space-time context in which we observe it.

  10. Conventional signs can have different meanings in different contexts. The whistle of a policeman directing traffics, and the whistle of the referee in a soccer game sound exactly the same, but they convey different meanings due to the difference of contexts in which the signal occurs.

  11. Thanks

More Related