enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Speech act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_act

    The study of speech acts is prevalent in legal theory since laws themselves can be interpreted as speech acts. Laws issue out a command to their constituents, which can be realized as an action. When forming a legal contract, speech acts can be made when people are making or accepting an offer. [41]

  3. Illocutionary act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illocutionary_act

    commissives = speech acts that commit a speaker to some future action, e.g. promises and oaths; expressives = speech acts that express on the speaker's attitudes and emotions towards the proposition, e.g. congratulations, excuses and thanks; declarations = speech acts that change the reality in accord with the proposition of the declaration, e ...

  4. United States free speech exceptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_free_speech...

    According to the Supreme Court of the United States, the U.S. Constitution protects free speech while allowing limitations on certain categories of speech. [1] Categories of speech that are given lesser or no protection by the First Amendment (and therefore may be restricted) include obscenity, fraud, child pornography, speech integral to ...

  5. Performative utterance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Performative_utterance

    [5]: 13 However, he criticizes the notion of 'felicity conditions' and the idea that the success of a performative utterance is determined by conventions. Derrida values the distinctiveness of every individual speech act, because it has a specific effect in the particular situation in which it is performed.

  6. Ethnography of communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnography_of_communication

    A - act sequence: what speech acts make up the speech event, and what order they are performed in K - key : the tone or manner of performance (serious or joking, sincere or ironic, etc.) I - instrumentalities : what channel or medium of communication is used (e.g. speaking, signing, writing, drumming, whistling), and what language/variety is ...

  7. Locutionary act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locutionary_act

    In linguistics and the philosophy of language, a locutionary act is the performance of an utterance, and is one of the types of force, in addition to illocutionary act and perlocutionary act, typically cited in Speech Act Theory. [1] Speech Act Theory is a subfield of pragmatics that explores how words and sentences are not only used to present ...

  8. J. L. Austin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._L._Austin

    The performance of these three acts is the performance of a locution—it is the act of saying something. John has therefore performed a locutionary act. He has also done at least two other things: he has asked a question of, and elicited an answer from, Sue; in so doing, he has performed two further speech-acts, as Austin would have it:

  9. Speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech

    Speech may nevertheless express emotions or desires; people talk to themselves sometimes in acts that are a development of what some psychologists (e.g., Lev Vygotsky) have maintained is the use of silent speech in an interior monologue to vivify and organize cognition, sometimes in the momentary adoption of a dual persona as self addressing ...