In recent years, a local, or even grammatical, analysis of implicatures has gained popularity in pragmatics, especially to account for implicatures triggered by disjunctions embedded under other operators. Against this trend, in this chapter a more traditional—and perhaps more Gricean—global analysis of implicatures is defended. Crucial use is made of facts which provide a more fine-grained notion of meaning than traditionally assumed in truth-functional semantics. A Gricean motivation for this analysis will be provided as well. The fact-based analysis will also allow one to formulate a constraint much weaker than the one due to Hurford to explain the inappropriateness of certain disjunctive sentences
The Gricean approach explains implicatures by assumptions about the pragmatics of entire utterances....
This article develops a Gricean account for the computation of scalar implicatures in cases where on...
Abstract Grice (1975) pointed out that the ignorance inferences normally drawn when disjunctive sent...
Gricean implicatures are often viewed as a very weak kind of implication, viz., as optional enrichme...
The standard position in pragmatics to date has been that cancellability is useful way of differenti...
The standard position in pragmatics to date has been that cancellability is useful way of differenti...
The notion of implicature was first introduced by Paul Grice (1967, 1989), who defined it essentiall...
The Gricean approach explains implicatures by assumptions about the pragmatics of entire utterances...
While never himself employing the term ‘pragmatics’, Paul Grice laid out the map for modern pragmati...
International audienceOne of the characteristic marks of Gricean implicatures in general, and scalar...
This chapter covers the notions of inference and implicature from a broad pragmatic and sociopragmat...
Conversational implicature is (roughly) the practice of conveying one thing by saying another. Philo...
An accessible and thorough introduction to implicatures, a key topic in all frameworks of pragmatics...
H. P. Grice is widely accredited with the discovery of implicature, that which is not literally said...
The following article focuses on the new branch of linguistic Pragmatics. We studied the...
The Gricean approach explains implicatures by assumptions about the pragmatics of entire utterances....
This article develops a Gricean account for the computation of scalar implicatures in cases where on...
Abstract Grice (1975) pointed out that the ignorance inferences normally drawn when disjunctive sent...
Gricean implicatures are often viewed as a very weak kind of implication, viz., as optional enrichme...
The standard position in pragmatics to date has been that cancellability is useful way of differenti...
The standard position in pragmatics to date has been that cancellability is useful way of differenti...
The notion of implicature was first introduced by Paul Grice (1967, 1989), who defined it essentiall...
The Gricean approach explains implicatures by assumptions about the pragmatics of entire utterances...
While never himself employing the term ‘pragmatics’, Paul Grice laid out the map for modern pragmati...
International audienceOne of the characteristic marks of Gricean implicatures in general, and scalar...
This chapter covers the notions of inference and implicature from a broad pragmatic and sociopragmat...
Conversational implicature is (roughly) the practice of conveying one thing by saying another. Philo...
An accessible and thorough introduction to implicatures, a key topic in all frameworks of pragmatics...
H. P. Grice is widely accredited with the discovery of implicature, that which is not literally said...
The following article focuses on the new branch of linguistic Pragmatics. We studied the...
The Gricean approach explains implicatures by assumptions about the pragmatics of entire utterances....
This article develops a Gricean account for the computation of scalar implicatures in cases where on...
Abstract Grice (1975) pointed out that the ignorance inferences normally drawn when disjunctive sent...