‘Tu m’embrasses encore, et c’est mon pied dans les pompons !’ Comment construit-on le sens ?
This study concerns French constructions producing a hypothetical interpretation composed of two juxtaposed or and-connected assertions such as You say one more word (and) I’m leaving. The introductory assertion expresses a fact that is at odds with elements of the situation of utterance. Indeed, it...
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Main Author: | |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Presses universitaires de Caen
2017-10-01
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Series: | Discours |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.openedition.org/discours/4173 |
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Summary: | This study concerns French constructions producing a hypothetical interpretation composed of two juxtaposed or and-connected assertions such as You say one more word (and) I’m leaving. The introductory assertion expresses a fact that is at odds with elements of the situation of utterance. Indeed, it is quite obvious that the addressee is not talking in the situation of utterance: You say one more word can’t be a statement, and if it were it would be of poor informative content. I suggest an analysis of these constructions on the interface between syntax and pragmatics. These binary constructions present a mismatch between a formal structure (an assertion) and some pragmatic requirements usually linked to it (commitment, for example). These assertions – expressed under a “validation key” – increment the common ground with two items of information: (i) the validity of a state of affairs O; (ii) the allocation of a modal commentary to this fact, for example . I try to understand how this modal commentary is inferred. In my view, this inference is produced by two information sources in competition: a linguistic one – the state of affairs O is asserted – and an extralinguistic one – the experimental truth refutes the validity of O. |
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ISSN: | 1963-1723 |