Pragmatics Flashcards
Implied meaning/ implication
The conclusion that can be drawn from something although it is not explicitly stated
Politeness
When someone uses their language to avoid offend someone else
The consideration of manners, rudeness and ‘saving face’ / avoid embarrassment
Identity (cultural, social, personal values, attitudes)
Who you are to yourself, the world and the characteristics that define you
Grice maxims
- Quality - don’t say what you believe to be false or lack evidence
- Relevance - be relevant
- Quantity - make contribution as informative as required (don’t say unnecessary information)
- Manner - avoid ambiguity, be brief, be orderly
Overt and covert prestige
Overt - accent/ vocabulary reflects the culturally dominant group, usually those in power or authority - change your voice to seem more prestigious e.g. R.P
Covert- - vocab/accent related to a particular regional or cultural vernacular. Distinguish yourself/ a group from the culturally dominant group as an act of solidarity, community or individual identity
Howard Giles accomodation theory
Convergence
Divergence
Subconscious or conscious choices we make when communicating with others
Convergence - mirror other persons vocab/accent etc, improves effectiveness of convo, enhance communication, mirror gestures, enhances liking and approval
Divergence - works in opposite direction to convergence, speaks and gestures differently from other person, accentuates differences, reinforces individual identity, discourages relationship, correcting poor English, behaviour modification