Results 101 to 110 of about 29,807 (214)
Redeeming by Unlearning: A Critical Discourse Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy on Facebook. [PDF]
Ma J, Bonnici L.
europepmc +1 more source
Raising Knowledge of Illocutionary Acts and Implicatures Used in a Thesis Examination Context for Students of English Language Education Study Program [PDF]
This paper deals with raising knowledge of the illocutionary acts and implied meanings for students of English education study program. It aims to describe the types of illocutionary acts, illocutionary forces, and conversational implicatures used in the
Margana, A. (Author:)
core
Don't be deceived: bald-faced lies are deceitful assertions. [PDF]
Rudnicki J, Odrowąż-Sypniewska J.
europepmc +1 more source
Zimbabwean author Yvonne Vera’s Butterfly Burning (1998) depicts anintense and tragically concluded love relationship between a middle-aged colonised male labourer, Fumbatha, and an idealistic and much younger woman, Phephelaphi.
Annie Gagiano
doaj
Older adults' refusal speech act in cognitive assessment: A multimodal pragmatic perspective. [PDF]
Huang L, Qu H, Zhou D.
europepmc +1 more source
This study explores the dynamics of speech acts within communication processes, with a focus on Searle’s classification of illocutionary acts into five categories: assertive, referential, commissive, expressive, and declarative.
Feri Lusianto +2 more
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A one-valued logic for non-one-sidedness [PDF]
Does it make sense to employ modern logical tools for ancient philosophy? This well-known debate2 has been re-launched by the indologist Piotr Balcerowicz, questioning those who want to look at the Eastern school of Jainism with Western glasses.
Schang, Fabien
core
This research reports on an assertive illocutionary act performed by khatib ‘Islam preacher’ in Friday sermons in Baiturohim Mosque of Surakarta. This qualitative research aims to elucidate utterance's form, function, and meaning in the assertive ...
Sri Kuncoro DibyoSarjono Maskuri Maksum
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This article revisits the notion of indirect speech acts (ISA) in the light of a weak formulation of the classical Literal Force Hypothesis. It is argued that ISAs are actually instances of unspecified illocutions, which allows for the positing of a conventionalization cline in their realization.
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