NMTS-Group4: Difference between revisions
(→Links) |
|||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
* [[User:Jennifer Borchert| Jenny]] | * [[User:Jennifer Borchert| Jenny]] | ||
* [[User:Anna P.| Anna P.]] | * [[User:Anna P.| Anna P.]] | ||
* Elena | * [[User:Elena|Elena]] | ||
=== Short description of the topic === | === Short description of the topic === |
Revision as of 13:42, 29 October 2012
Warning:
The material on this page has been created as part of a seminar. It is still heavily under construction and we do not guarantee its correctness. If you have comments on this page or suggestions for improvement, please contact Manfred Sailer.
This note will be removed once the page has been carefully checked and integrated into the main part of this wiki.
Wikipage of Group 4
Overview
Members
Short description of the topic
An implicature is anything that is inferred from an utterance but that is not a condition for the truth of the utterance. There are different types of implicatures. Below you find a brief overview:
Potential implicature. A potential implicature is an implicature that would arise from any of the components of a given utterance if that component were uttered in some linguistic or extralinguistic context.
Actual implicature. An actual implicature is any potential implicature that is not canceled by its context.
References and links
References
- Bieswanger, Becker (2008). Introduction to English Linguistics. Tübingen: A.Francke.
Links
- Definition of implicature from the Online English Dictionary
- Definition and detailed explanation from the Stanford Encylopedia of Philosophy
- Definition from Universal Teacher
Our e-learning objects
Our wiki pages
- in the Glossary:
Our podcasts
Our materials for an interactive whiteboard
Our pictures
Our exercises
- Exercise on types of implicatures.