1 / 9

Semantics Unit 2

Semantics Unit 2. Sentences, Utterances, Propositions. Definition of an Utterance. Any stretch of talk, by one person Before and after which that person is silent The use of a piece of language By a particular speaker On a particular occasion

kgrace
Télécharger la présentation

Semantics Unit 2

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. Semantics Unit 2 Sentences, Utterances, Propositions

  2. Definition of an Utterance • Any stretch of talk, by one person • Before and after which that person is silent • The use of a piece of language • By a particular speaker • On a particular occasion • Can be a single word, a sentence, or sentences • Each Utterance is a unique physical event • Sounds are transferred in the air

  3. Practice 1- Utterances (1) "Hello" Yes / No (2) "Not much" Yes / No (3) "Utterances may consist of a single word, a single phrase or a single sentence; They may also consist of a sequence of sentences. It is not unusual to find utterances that consist of one or more grammatically incomplete sentence-fragments. In short, there is no simple relation of correspondence between utterances and sentences" Yes / No (4) "Pxgotmgt" Yes / No (5) "Schplotzenpflaaaaaaargh!" Yes / No

  4. Definition of a Sentence • Neither a physical event nor physical object • It is abstract occurs in written form • A sequence of words put together according to grammatical rules of a language • An ideal string of words that is the basis for a variety of realizations that may occur as: - Utterances OR - In Written Form

  5. Practice 2 - Sentences (1) Do all (authentic) performances of 'Macbeth' begin by using the same sentence? Yes / No (2) Do all (authentic) performances of 'Macbeth' begin withthe same utterance? Yes / No (3) Does it make sense to talk of the time and place of a sentence? Yes / No (4) Does it make sense to talk of the time and place of an utterance? Yes / No (5) Can one talk of a loud sentence? Yes / No (6) Can one talk of a slow utterance? Yes / No

  6. “Quotation Marks” VS Italics “The riders have been struck by lightning” U or S? The riders have been struck by lightning. U or S (1) For each of the following label it as an utterance (U) or sentence (S), as appropriate, by circling your choice. (a) "The train now arriving at platform one is the 11.1 5 from King's Cross" (b) The pelican ignores the linguist. (2) Given our conventions, say what is wrong with the following: (a) John announced Mary’shere in his squeakiest voice (b) "Mary thought how nice John was"

  7. A Rule We have defined a sentence as a string of words. A given sentence always consists of the same words, and in the same order. Any change in the words or in their order, makes a different sentence, for our purposes: Helen rolled up the carpet different sentences Helen rolled the carpet up Sincerity may frighten the boy} the same sentence Sincerity may frighten the boy

  8. Accent and voice quality belong strictly to the utterance, not to the sentence. (1) Does it make sense to ask what language (e.g. English, French: Chinese) a sentence belongs to? Yes / No (2) What languages do the following sentences belong to? Je ne sais quoi. AileMenschensprecheneineSprache.

  9. Assignment for the next class: Second part of Unit 2 – Utterances, Sentences, and Propositions Practices 5 -11

More Related