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  2. Speech act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_act

    According to Kent Bach, "almost any speech act is really the performance of several acts at once, distinguished by different aspects of the speaker's intention: there is the act of saying something, what one does in saying it, such as requesting or promising, and how one is trying to affect one's audience".

  3. Discourse-completion task - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discourse-completion_task

    The instrument was originally developed by Shoshana Blum-Kulka for studying speech act realization comparatively between native and non-native Hebrew speakers, based on the work of E. Levenston. [1] DCTs are used in pragmatics research to study speech acts and find the medium between naturally occurring speech and scripted speech acts.

  4. Locutionary act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locutionary_act

    Speech Act Theory is a subfield of pragmatics that explores how words and sentences are not only used to present information, but also to perform actions. [2] As an utterance, a locutionary act is considered a performative , in which both the audience and the speaker must trust certain conditions about the speech act.

  5. Performative utterance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Performative_utterance

    Searle further claimed that performatives are what he calls declarations; this is a technical notion of Searle's account: according to his conception, an utterance is a declaration, if "the successful performance of the speech act is sufficient to bring about the fit between words and world, to make the propositional content true."

  6. Illocutionary act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illocutionary_act

    commissives = speech acts that commit a speaker to some future action, e.g. promises and oaths; expressives = speech acts that express on the speaker's attitudes and emotions towards the proposition, e.g. congratulations, excuses and thanks; declarations = speech acts that change the reality in accord with the proposition of the declaration, e ...

  7. Relevance theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relevance_theory

    Relevance theory only recognises three types of generic, universal speech acts: saying (that), telling (to), and asking (whether). Other speech acts are either culture specific or institutional rather than linguistic (for example, bidding at bridge, promising, or thanking); they have to be learned like all aspects of a culture, or

  8. Trump appears to emulate ‘sex act’ on microphone after he ...

    www.aol.com/news/trump-appears-emulate-sex-act...

    This is Trump on stage at a rally, pretending to perform a sex-act on a microphone. Trump appeared to make the gesture on stage at a rally in Milwaukee on November 1 (Fox News/YouTube)

  9. Descriptive fallacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descriptive_fallacy

    The descriptive fallacy refers to reasoning which treats a speech act as a logical proposition, which would be mistaken when the meaning of the statement is not based on its truth condition. [1] It was suggested by the British philosopher of language J. L. Austin in 1955 in the lectures now known as How to Do Things With Words.