Utterances give rise to many potential inferences. They can be communicated explicitly or implicitly, they may or may not be intended, and they may or may not even be inferred. In this paper, we focus on how speakers orient to ‘unwanted inferences’: potential inferences (or inferables) that can – but need not – be inferred from what has been said. Such inferences can be ‘unwanted’ in different ways: as secondary propositions that the speaker does not wish to be – or to have been – inferred, or as secondary propositions that the speaker does not wish to be held committed to having communicated. We illustrate the practices or methods by which speakers attempt to divert attention from them, offering a 6-part taxonomy that accounts for: (a) the...
Session: Repair across ModalitiesInternational audienceIn this presentation, we focus on conversatio...
Consistent with the well-established tradition of cognitive pragmatics, this work hinges on the idea...
The hypothesis that “invited inferences” are factors in change and challenges to it are reviewed. In...
Utterances give rise to many potential inferences. They can be communicated explicitly or implicitly...
This paper argues that conversation analysis has largely neglected the fact that meaning in interact...
This paper argues that conversation analysis has largely neglected the fact that meaning in interact...
I explore some of the interconnections between inferences that participants make about one another’s...
It is often claimed that, because of semantic underdetermination, one can determine the content of a...
This conversation analysis study focuses on sequences where speakers make a piece of information exp...
This paper offers an exploratory Interactional Linguistic account of the role that inferences play i...
Inferring what speakers mean from what they say requires consideration of what they know. For instan...
It is commonplace to observe that utterances can convey more information than they explicitly encode...
It is well known that argumentation can usefully be analysed as a distinct, if complex, type of spee...
Abstract In this paper, we use concepts, structure and tools from argumentation theory to show how c...
An inference is defined as the information that is not expressed explicitly by the text but is deriv...
Session: Repair across ModalitiesInternational audienceIn this presentation, we focus on conversatio...
Consistent with the well-established tradition of cognitive pragmatics, this work hinges on the idea...
The hypothesis that “invited inferences” are factors in change and challenges to it are reviewed. In...
Utterances give rise to many potential inferences. They can be communicated explicitly or implicitly...
This paper argues that conversation analysis has largely neglected the fact that meaning in interact...
This paper argues that conversation analysis has largely neglected the fact that meaning in interact...
I explore some of the interconnections between inferences that participants make about one another’s...
It is often claimed that, because of semantic underdetermination, one can determine the content of a...
This conversation analysis study focuses on sequences where speakers make a piece of information exp...
This paper offers an exploratory Interactional Linguistic account of the role that inferences play i...
Inferring what speakers mean from what they say requires consideration of what they know. For instan...
It is commonplace to observe that utterances can convey more information than they explicitly encode...
It is well known that argumentation can usefully be analysed as a distinct, if complex, type of spee...
Abstract In this paper, we use concepts, structure and tools from argumentation theory to show how c...
An inference is defined as the information that is not expressed explicitly by the text but is deriv...
Session: Repair across ModalitiesInternational audienceIn this presentation, we focus on conversatio...
Consistent with the well-established tradition of cognitive pragmatics, this work hinges on the idea...
The hypothesis that “invited inferences” are factors in change and challenges to it are reviewed. In...