Categories and complements of illocutionary verbs in a cognitive perspective

Bibliographic Information

Categories and complements of illocutionary verbs in a cognitive perspective

Johan Vanparys

(Duisburger Arbeiten zur Sprach- und Kulturwissenschaft = Duisburg papers on research in language and culture, Bd. 26)

Peter Lang, 1996

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  • : us

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Note

Originally presented as the author's thesis (doctoral)--Katholieke Universiteit te Leuven, 1993

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Several speech-act theories hinge on taxonomies which divide the total set of illocutions into mutually exclusive and homogeneous subsets. This book starts with a critical appraisal of these classifications and then suggests an alternative approach on the basis of arguments from cognitive linguistics: an analysis of illocutionary-force indicating devices, such as illocutionary verbs, which are singled out as the object of investigation because they directly name illocutions. A partial analysis of 120 illocutionary verbs is undertaken within the framework of Cognitive Grammar and based on authentic data. The verbs are analysed with regard to their valence potential, more specifically constructions involving clausal complements: direct-speech constructions, that-clauses, infinitival complements, participial complements and gerundival complements.

Table of Contents

Contents: Speech-act taxonomy: a critical review - demonstrates the inadequacy of past attempts at classifying illocutions - From speech-act theory to cognitive semantics - suggests an alternative approach on the basis of arguments from cognitive linguistics - Clausal complementation of illocutionary verbs - the complementation potential of 120 illocutionary verbs is analysed within the framework of Cognitive Grammar and based on authentic data.

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