https://www.jstor.org/stable/3506193
may be true as well as (2). In the first three sentences "means" expresses d nification. Replacement by "signifies" is not poss.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/F70E45A64D37EACDF10A8ABE0CA37BD1/S0012217300018862a.pdf/sentence-meaning-speaker-meaning-and-davidsons-denial-of-metaphorical-meaning.pdf
of speaker meaning and conversational implicature are cast in very by means of a sentence S it is not enough for her to mean that P'S must also be a.
SENTENCE MEANING. Grice's initial attempt at defining sentence meaning in terms of speaker meaning was extremely rough and found few followers.
https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110687538-017/pdf
In other words conventional meaning (“sentence meaning”) is to be analyzed in terms of speaker's meaning
Speaker Meaning Sentential Force and Discourse. Ling324 For instance
Moreover the putative literal meanings of sentences da not contribute in systematic ways toward the understanding of speakers' utterance mean- ings. These.
as the interpretation the speaker attaches to hi occasion of utterance. This latter notion unlike utterer's occasion-mea to things like jokes
(Thus a speaker who in saying “You have been very kind to me Sally” means that Sally has been very rude to him is a speaker who speaks ironically because
(Speaker Meaning) Sentence (1) says that boulders are "natural signs" of glacial activity which is true because the causal connection between boulders and
been acknowledged with regard to Grice's notion of saying: for a speaker to say that P by means of a sentence S it is not enough for her to mean that P'S
For instance we have said the meaning of a declarative sentence is associated with its truth conditions which are expressed by set-theoretic statements (1) a
28 avr 1997 · Chapter 8: Meaning and Conversation Sentence Meaning vs Speaker Meaning There is an important difference between the meaning of a
What Is speaker's meaning? When the speaker utters a sentence the hearer receives communicative signs in addition to propositional content According to speech
(Speaker Meaning) Sentence (1) says that boulders are "natural signs" of glacial activity which is true because the causal connection between boulders and
Searle (1985) denied that words or sentences can possess a metaphorical meaning in addition to their literal meaning but he nevertheless insisted that in
This article aims at analyzing the sentence meaning and speaker meaning from philosophical perspectives based on Lycan's proposal in
Implicating as it is conceived in recent pragmatics amounts to conveying a (propositional) content without saying it – a content providing no contribution