This book builds on Kasia Jaszczolt's earlier work on Default Semantics. It draws on data from a variety of languages to show that meaning should be understood as a merger of information coming from different sources and via a variety of interacting processes.
This book builds on Kasia Jaszczolt's earlier work on Default Semantics. It draws on data from a variety of languages to show that meaning should be understood as a merger of information coming from different sources and via a variety of interacting processes.
Kasia M. Jaszczolt is Professor of Linguistics and Philosophy of Language at the University of Cambridge and Professorial Fellow of Newnham College, Cambridge. She has published extensively on various topics in semantics, pragmatics, and philosophy of language, and in 2012 was elected a member of the Academia Europaea. Her authored books include Discourse, Beliefs and Intentions (Elsevier, 1999), Semantics and Pragmatics (Longman, 2002), Default Semantics (OUP, 2005), and Representing Time (OUP, 2009); she is also co-editor, with Keith Allan, of The Cambridge Handbook of Pragmatics (CUP, 2012), with Louis de Saussure, of Time: Language, Cognition, and Reality (OUP, 2013), and, with Minyao Huang, of Expressing the Self (OUP, 2017).
Inhaltsangabe
Preface List of abbreviations and symbols Introduction 1: Wrong about meaning 2: Interactive composition of meaning 3: Defaults in context 4: Delimiting the lexicon 5: The demise of indexicals: A case study Conclusion: Dispelling semantic myths References Index
Preface List of abbreviations and symbols Introduction 1: Wrong about meaning 2: Interactive composition of meaning 3: Defaults in context 4: Delimiting the lexicon 5: The demise of indexicals: A case study Conclusion: Dispelling semantic myths References Index
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