Abstract:1. Chapter 1. Introduction (by Vanderveken, Daniel) 2. Part I. General Theory 3. Chapter 2. Universal Grammar and Speech Act Theory (by Vanderveken, Daniel) 4. Chapter 3. Verbal Mood and Sentence Mood...1. Chapter 1. Introduction (by Vanderveken, Daniel) 2. Part I. General Theory 3. Chapter 2. Universal Grammar and Speech Act Theory (by Vanderveken, Daniel) 4. Chapter 3. Verbal Mood and Sentence Moods in the Tradition of Universal Grammar (by Leclerc, Andre) 5. Chapter 4. How Performatives Work (by Searle, John R.) 6. Chapter 5. Possible Directions of Fit between Mind, Language and the World (by Sousa Melo, Candida J. de) 7. Part II. Discourse and Interlocution 8. Chapter 6. Speech Acts and the logic of mutual understanding (by Trognon, Alain) 9. Chapter 7. Utterance acts and speech acts (by Davis, Steven) 10. Chapter 8. An Ascription-Based Theory of Illocutionary Acts (by Yamada, Tomoyuki) 11. Chapter 9. An approach for modelling and simulating conversations (by Moulin, Bernard) 12. Part III. Speech Acts in Linguistics 13. Chapter 10. Illocutionary Morphology and Speech Acts (by Kubo, Susumu) 14. Chapter 11. Speech-Act Constructions, Illocutionary Forces, and Conventionality (by Yamanashi, Masa-aki) 15. Chapter 12. Speech act theory and the analysis of conversation (by Moeschler, Jacques) 16. Chapter 13. Speech Acts and Relevance Theory (by Dominicy, Marc) 17. Notes 18. References 19. Notes on Contributors 20. Subject Index 21. Name IndexRead More
Publication Year: 2001
Publication Date: 2001-12-21
Language: en
Type: book
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 152
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