This article addresses the motivation and constraints of illocutionary meaning production. Within the framework of the Lexical Constructional Model (LCM), I explore how our knowledge of illocution is understood in terms of high-level situational models which are activated to produce speech act meaning and the way such operations motivate the conventionalized value of linguistic expressions. In so doing, I analyze the realization procedures of the Aux NP construction in relation to their potential to exploit the semantic base of requestive acts. I will study the most conventional linguistic realizations of the construction and explore the way in which such realizations are used to produce a requestive meaning. The resulting account provides ...
The present contribution studies the semantic base of orders at level 3 of the Lexical Constructiona...
This paper focuses on conventionalized and non-conventionalized indirect speech acts, and more concr...
This chapter proposes the Lexical Constructional Model (LCM) as an explanatorily adequate model for ...
This article addresses the motivation and constraints of illocutionary meaning production. Within th...
This article develops previous research carried out by Ruiz de Mendoza and Baicchi (2007) on the not...
The present paper focuses on the description of illocutionary constructions at level 3 of the Lexica...
[EN] The present paper focuses on the description of illocutionary constructions at level 3 of the L...
3 illocutionary constructions will be shown as providing structure in terms of the interplay between...
This book presents a constructional approach to the study of illocution. Ten directive and commisive...
The chapter discusses conceptual metonymy in meaning construction and interpretation and, after subs...
The paper deals with Speech Act Theory from the perspective of Cognitive Linguistics. It puts forwar...
This chapter aims to contribute to the discussion of indirect speech acts by describing how construc...
This paper focuses on conventionalized requests such as Can you X?, which are here considered to be...
This paper looks at how illocutionary meaning could be accommodated in FunGramKB, a Natural Languag...
The present contribution studies the cognitive motivation and linguistic realization of illocutionar...
The present contribution studies the semantic base of orders at level 3 of the Lexical Constructiona...
This paper focuses on conventionalized and non-conventionalized indirect speech acts, and more concr...
This chapter proposes the Lexical Constructional Model (LCM) as an explanatorily adequate model for ...
This article addresses the motivation and constraints of illocutionary meaning production. Within th...
This article develops previous research carried out by Ruiz de Mendoza and Baicchi (2007) on the not...
The present paper focuses on the description of illocutionary constructions at level 3 of the Lexica...
[EN] The present paper focuses on the description of illocutionary constructions at level 3 of the L...
3 illocutionary constructions will be shown as providing structure in terms of the interplay between...
This book presents a constructional approach to the study of illocution. Ten directive and commisive...
The chapter discusses conceptual metonymy in meaning construction and interpretation and, after subs...
The paper deals with Speech Act Theory from the perspective of Cognitive Linguistics. It puts forwar...
This chapter aims to contribute to the discussion of indirect speech acts by describing how construc...
This paper focuses on conventionalized requests such as Can you X?, which are here considered to be...
This paper looks at how illocutionary meaning could be accommodated in FunGramKB, a Natural Languag...
The present contribution studies the cognitive motivation and linguistic realization of illocutionar...
The present contribution studies the semantic base of orders at level 3 of the Lexical Constructiona...
This paper focuses on conventionalized and non-conventionalized indirect speech acts, and more concr...
This chapter proposes the Lexical Constructional Model (LCM) as an explanatorily adequate model for ...