Pragmatics is a subfield of linguistics that studies how people understand and produce communicative acts based on context, including social and cultural factors. It focuses on speaker meaning rather than just the literal meaning of words. Pragmatics analyzes how utterances take on different meanings and functions depending on contextual elements like who is speaking, who is listening, where they are, and the intent of the communication. It also examines how language users interpret meanings beyond what is literally said based on inferences from context. The scope of pragmatics has expanded over time from its original focus on the relationship between signs and interpreters to include additional areas like sociolinguistics and discourse analysis.
Pragmatics is a subfield of linguistics that studies how people understand and produce communicative acts based on context, including social and cultural factors. It focuses on speaker meaning rather than just the literal meaning of words. Pragmatics analyzes how utterances take on different meanings and functions depending on contextual elements like who is speaking, who is listening, where they are, and the intent of the communication. It also examines how language users interpret meanings beyond what is literally said based on inferences from context. The scope of pragmatics has expanded over time from its original focus on the relationship between signs and interpreters to include additional areas like sociolinguistics and discourse analysis.
Pragmatics is a subfield of linguistics that studies how people understand and produce communicative acts based on context, including social and cultural factors. It focuses on speaker meaning rather than just the literal meaning of words. Pragmatics analyzes how utterances take on different meanings and functions depending on contextual elements like who is speaking, who is listening, where they are, and the intent of the communication. It also examines how language users interpret meanings beyond what is literally said based on inferences from context. The scope of pragmatics has expanded over time from its original focus on the relationship between signs and interpreters to include additional areas like sociolinguistics and discourse analysis.
Pragmatics is a subfield of linguistics that studies how people understand and produce communicative acts based on context, including social and cultural factors. It focuses on speaker meaning rather than just the literal meaning of words. Pragmatics analyzes how utterances take on different meanings and functions depending on contextual elements like who is speaking, who is listening, where they are, and the intent of the communication. It also examines how language users interpret meanings beyond what is literally said based on inferences from context. The scope of pragmatics has expanded over time from its original focus on the relationship between signs and interpreters to include additional areas like sociolinguistics and discourse analysis.
Pragmatics is a subfield of linguistics developed in the late
1970s
1. The study of what speakers mean, or ‘speaker meaning’.
2. Concerned with the study of meaning as communicated by a speaker(or writer) and interpreted by a listener(or readers) [Yule: 1996]
It has, consequently, more to do with the analysis of what
people mean by their utterances than what the words or phrases in those utterances might mean by themselves. Pragmatics is the study of speaker meaning.
The utterance' I’ve got a headache' carries a variety of
meanings according to when it is used, who uses it, who the person is talking to, where the conversation takes place, and so forth: • If a patient said it to a doctor during a medical examination, it could mean: I need prescription. • If a mother said it to her teenage son, it could mean: Turn down the music. • If two friends were talking, it could mean: I was partying last night. • If it were used as a response to an invitation from one friend to another, such as Do you fancy going for a walk?, it could simply mean: No
Therefore, depending on the context it occurs in, the
utterance I’ve got a headache can function as an appeal, an imperative, a complaint or a refusal, and so on. In any language, what is said is often quite distinct to what is meant, or to put it another way, form is often very different to content. As such pragmatics does not assume a one-to-one relationship between language form and utterance function, but is concerned instead with accounting for the processes that give rise to a particular interpretation of an utterance that is usedin a particular context.
Pragmatics studies how people comprehend and produce a
communicative act or speech act in a concrete speech situation which is usually a conversation (hence *conversation analysis). It distinguishes two intents or meanings in each utterance or communicative act of verbal communication. One is the informative intent or the sentence meaning, and the other the communicative intent or speaker meaning (Leech, 1983; Sperber and Wilson, 1986). The ability to comprehend and produce a communicative act is referred to as pragmatic competence (Kasper, 1997) which often includes one’s knowledge about the social distance, social status between the speakers involved, the cultural knowledge such as politeness, and the linguistic knowledge explicit and implicit. Here are a few definitions of pragmatics that give a clearer insight into what pragmatics involves:
(i) Pragmatics is “the investigation into that aspect of
meaning which is derived not from the formal properties of words, but from the way in which utterances are used and how they relate to the context in which they are uttered.” Notice the word “utterances” not necessarily sentences. (Leech & Short) (ii) ii) - Pragmatics is “the study of meaning in relation to speech situations”. The speech situation enables the speaker use language to achieve a particular effect on the mind of the hearer.” Thus the speech is goal- oriented (i.e. the meaning which the speaker or writer intends to communicate(Leech (1983:6)). (iii) Pragmatics is “the study of those aspects of the relationship between language and context that are relevant to the writing of grammars.” Notice in this definition that interest is mainly in the inter-relation of language and principles of language use that are context dependent (Levinson 1983:9.) Yule as seen above focuses on this definition of pragmatics in terms of study; i.e. pragmatics is 1) the study of speaker meaning, i.e. the study of meaning as communicated by a speaker (or writer) and interpreted by a listener (or reader); 2) the study of contextual meaning, i.e. the interpretation of speaker meaning in its context, since context affects what is said; 3) the study of how more gets communicated than is said. In a communicative act, the speaker usually interacts with a listener, who is called to make inferences about what is said in order to interpret the speaker’s intended meaning; 4) the study of the expression of relative distance, i.e. the physical, social, or conceptual distance (or closeness) between the speaker and the listener. Pragmatics is the only field of linguistic analysis to be concerned with humans and their verbal (and non-verbal) interactions. This inevitably poses a series of problems, which decrease or increase depending on the degree of familiarity between the speaker and the listener, that is on what ‘Yule’ refers to as the relative distance between the speaker and the listener: the closer the distance between speakers, (e.g. a familiar social group), the more successful their interaction. Most definitions of pragmatics pay lip service to Charles Morris’s famous definition of pragmatics as “the study of the relation of signs to interpreters” (1938). In a modern, communication-oriented terminology, we prefer to talk about ‘messages’ and ‘language users’; in contrast to traditional linguistics, which first and foremost concentrates on the elements and structures, such as sounds and sentences that the language users produce, pragmatics focuses on the language-using humans. Put differently, pragmatics is interested in the process of producing language and in its producers, not just in the end-product, language. Pragmatics, as suggested is indeed a new paradigm of research; hence it is obliged to come up with a new definition of the object of that research. What would such a new definition imply with regard to the research object in question, language, in its ‘old’ vs. its ‘new’ interpretation which is, language as a human product vs. language in its human use? Or one could simply divide the study of language into two independent parts: one, a description of its structure (as dealt with by the traditional methods of grammar), the other, a description of its use (to be taken care of by pragmatics).
The Scope of Pragmatics
By scope, we mean the levels to which the study of
pragmatics has been extended. For the purpose of our present study, we must mention that linguistic pragmatics as it is used today is a lot more restricted than when the term “pragmatics” was first used by Charles Morris (1938). Morris was interested in Semiotics – the general study of signs and symbols.
Pragmatics was defined as the “relation of signs to the
interpreters.” We shall look at this in detail in the next unit. Morris then extended the scope of pragmatics to include psychological, biological and sociological phenomena which occur in the functioning of signs (Levinson, 1983). This will include what is known today as psycholinguistics, sociolinguistic, neurolinguistics among others. Today, linguistic pragmatics mostly dwells on those factors of language use that govern the choices individuals make in social interaction and the effects of those choices on others.
In recent times however, extended researches in cultural
studies and social discourse argue in favour of discourse pragmatics rather than the traditional linguistic pragmatics. Fairclough (1989) for instance argues that rather than see language use as an individual’s strategies of encoding meaning to achieve some particular effects on the hearer or reader, we should be concerned with the fact that social conventions and 116 ideologies, define peoples roles, identities and language performances; people simply communicate in some particular ways as the society determines. While people can manipulate language to achieve certain purposes, they in some circumstances are actually ruled by social conventions. In the same vein, pragmatic study has thrown some lights in the study of literature giving rise to literary pragmatics, while the application of pragmatics to computational linguistics has also developed into computational pragmatics, etc.