Description

Book Synopsis

Meaning addresses the fundamental question of human language interaction: what it is to mean, and how we communicate our meanings to others. Experienced textbook writer and eminent researcher Betty J. Birner gives balanced coverage to semantics and pragmatics, emphasizing interactions between the two, and discusses other fields of language study such as syntax, neurology, philosophy of language, and artificial intelligence in terms of their interfaces with linguistic meaning.

Comics and diagrams appear throughout to keep the reader engaged; and end-of-chapter quizzes, data-collection exercises, and opinion questions are employed along with more traditional exercises and discussion questions. In addition, the book features copious examples from real life and current events, along with boxes describing linguistic issues in the news and interesting and accessible research on topics like swearing, politics, and animal communication. Students will emerge ready for deeper s

Trade Review

"Betty Birner’s new book is an ideal guide for students’ magical mystery tour of the fascinating intricacies of pragmatics and semantics. Professor Birner clearly introduces landmark research in linguistics, philosophy, and other relevant disciplines, inspiring and helping students begin exploring meaning-language connections for themselves."

Sally McConnell-Ginet, Linguistics, Cornell University, USA



Table of Contents

List of boxes

List of figures

List of truth tables

Preface

Acknowledgments

1. What is language?

Linguistics

The rules of language

Language change

Research in linguistics

Philosophy of language: How meaning works

Types of meaning

Where is meaning located?

The philosophers weigh in, beginning with: Frege

Russell

Strawson

Donnellan

The upshot

Semantics and pragmatics

Discourse models and possible worlds

Exercises

2. Semantics I: Word meaning

What is a word?

Where words come from

Historical descent

Other sources of new words

Lexical relations

Approaches to word meaning

Componential analysis

Other primitive-based approaches

Prototype theory and The Great Sandwich Controversy

Exercises

3. Semantics II: Sentence meaning

Truth and meaning

Sentential relations

Logical operators

Negation

Conjunction

Disjunction

The conditional

The biconditional

Propositional logic

Analytic statements

Synthetic statements

Predicate logic

Predicates and constants

Variables

Quantifiers

Ambiguity and scope

Exercises

4. Pragmatics I: The Cooperative Principle

Reprise: Semantics vs. pragmatics

The Cooperative Principle

The maxims

The maxim of Quantity

The maxim of Quality

The maxim of Relation

The maxim of Manner

Revisiting Grice’s problem

Tests for conversational implicature

Implicature and pragmatic theory

Conventional implicature

The Gricean world view

Pragmatics after Grice

Explicature

Impliciture

Neo-Gricean theory

Relevance theory

Boundary disputes

Exercises

5. Pragmatics II: Speech acts

Speech acts

Performatives

Constatives

Types of speech acts: first pass

Indirect speech acts

Felicity conditions

Felicity conditions, speech acts, and the Cooperative Principle

Types of speech acts: second pass

Politeness theory

Exercises

6. Language structure

The Chomskyan revolution

Sound structure

Word structure

Morphemes

Allomorphs

Words

Parts of speech

Structure and function

Representing word structure

Other ways of building words

Sentence structure

Ambiguity and constituency

Representing sentence structure

Expanding our grammar

Structural ambiguity

So what’s the point?

Exercises

7. Interfaces I: Semantics, pragmatics, and philosophy

Reference and the semantics/pragmatics boundary

What do we refer to when we refer?

Deixis and anaphora

Indexicals

Deixis

Personal deixis

Spatial deixis

Temporal deixis

Discourse deixis

Anaphora

Reference resolution

Cataphora

Anaphora and phrase types

Definiteness

Definiteness as uniqueness

Definiteness as familiarity

Presupposition

Testing for presupposition

Presupposition triggers

Theories of presupposition

Accommodation

Exercises

8. Interfaces II: Structure and meaning

Semantic roles

Argument-structure alternations

Information structure

Preposing

Postposing

Argument reversal

Inference

Open propositions

Constructions

The type/token distinction

Exercises

9. Meaning and human cognition

Language and the brain

Brain structure

Neurons

Aphasia

Language and thought

Does the language I speak affect my view of reality?

Language use and world view

Advertising

Politics and public policy

Language and prejudice

Connecting the dots

Exercises

10. Meaning, minds, and machines

The nuts and bolts

Natural-language processing

Artificial intelligence

Data mining

Deep learning

Meaning and the self

Bodies and minds

Language and consciousness

Exercises

References

Index

Meaning

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A Paperback by Betty J. Birner

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    View other formats and editions of Meaning by Betty J. Birner

    Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
    Publication Date: 3/31/2023 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780367028848, 978-0367028848
    ISBN10: 0367028840

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Meaning addresses the fundamental question of human language interaction: what it is to mean, and how we communicate our meanings to others. Experienced textbook writer and eminent researcher Betty J. Birner gives balanced coverage to semantics and pragmatics, emphasizing interactions between the two, and discusses other fields of language study such as syntax, neurology, philosophy of language, and artificial intelligence in terms of their interfaces with linguistic meaning.

    Comics and diagrams appear throughout to keep the reader engaged; and end-of-chapter quizzes, data-collection exercises, and opinion questions are employed along with more traditional exercises and discussion questions. In addition, the book features copious examples from real life and current events, along with boxes describing linguistic issues in the news and interesting and accessible research on topics like swearing, politics, and animal communication. Students will emerge ready for deeper s

    Trade Review

    "Betty Birner’s new book is an ideal guide for students’ magical mystery tour of the fascinating intricacies of pragmatics and semantics. Professor Birner clearly introduces landmark research in linguistics, philosophy, and other relevant disciplines, inspiring and helping students begin exploring meaning-language connections for themselves."

    Sally McConnell-Ginet, Linguistics, Cornell University, USA



    Table of Contents

    List of boxes

    List of figures

    List of truth tables

    Preface

    Acknowledgments

    1. What is language?

    Linguistics

    The rules of language

    Language change

    Research in linguistics

    Philosophy of language: How meaning works

    Types of meaning

    Where is meaning located?

    The philosophers weigh in, beginning with: Frege

    Russell

    Strawson

    Donnellan

    The upshot

    Semantics and pragmatics

    Discourse models and possible worlds

    Exercises

    2. Semantics I: Word meaning

    What is a word?

    Where words come from

    Historical descent

    Other sources of new words

    Lexical relations

    Approaches to word meaning

    Componential analysis

    Other primitive-based approaches

    Prototype theory and The Great Sandwich Controversy

    Exercises

    3. Semantics II: Sentence meaning

    Truth and meaning

    Sentential relations

    Logical operators

    Negation

    Conjunction

    Disjunction

    The conditional

    The biconditional

    Propositional logic

    Analytic statements

    Synthetic statements

    Predicate logic

    Predicates and constants

    Variables

    Quantifiers

    Ambiguity and scope

    Exercises

    4. Pragmatics I: The Cooperative Principle

    Reprise: Semantics vs. pragmatics

    The Cooperative Principle

    The maxims

    The maxim of Quantity

    The maxim of Quality

    The maxim of Relation

    The maxim of Manner

    Revisiting Grice’s problem

    Tests for conversational implicature

    Implicature and pragmatic theory

    Conventional implicature

    The Gricean world view

    Pragmatics after Grice

    Explicature

    Impliciture

    Neo-Gricean theory

    Relevance theory

    Boundary disputes

    Exercises

    5. Pragmatics II: Speech acts

    Speech acts

    Performatives

    Constatives

    Types of speech acts: first pass

    Indirect speech acts

    Felicity conditions

    Felicity conditions, speech acts, and the Cooperative Principle

    Types of speech acts: second pass

    Politeness theory

    Exercises

    6. Language structure

    The Chomskyan revolution

    Sound structure

    Word structure

    Morphemes

    Allomorphs

    Words

    Parts of speech

    Structure and function

    Representing word structure

    Other ways of building words

    Sentence structure

    Ambiguity and constituency

    Representing sentence structure

    Expanding our grammar

    Structural ambiguity

    So what’s the point?

    Exercises

    7. Interfaces I: Semantics, pragmatics, and philosophy

    Reference and the semantics/pragmatics boundary

    What do we refer to when we refer?

    Deixis and anaphora

    Indexicals

    Deixis

    Personal deixis

    Spatial deixis

    Temporal deixis

    Discourse deixis

    Anaphora

    Reference resolution

    Cataphora

    Anaphora and phrase types

    Definiteness

    Definiteness as uniqueness

    Definiteness as familiarity

    Presupposition

    Testing for presupposition

    Presupposition triggers

    Theories of presupposition

    Accommodation

    Exercises

    8. Interfaces II: Structure and meaning

    Semantic roles

    Argument-structure alternations

    Information structure

    Preposing

    Postposing

    Argument reversal

    Inference

    Open propositions

    Constructions

    The type/token distinction

    Exercises

    9. Meaning and human cognition

    Language and the brain

    Brain structure

    Neurons

    Aphasia

    Language and thought

    Does the language I speak affect my view of reality?

    Language use and world view

    Advertising

    Politics and public policy

    Language and prejudice

    Connecting the dots

    Exercises

    10. Meaning, minds, and machines

    The nuts and bolts

    Natural-language processing

    Artificial intelligence

    Data mining

    Deep learning

    Meaning and the self

    Bodies and minds

    Language and consciousness

    Exercises

    References

    Index

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