ABSTRACT

Dr Keith Allan presents a coherent, consistent and comprehensive account of linguistic meaning, centred around an informally presented theory of meaning. It is intended for graduate and undergraduate students of linguistics, or any linguist curious about what a theory of meaning should seek to accomplish and the way to achieve that aim.

The work assumes that the primary task of a theory of linguistic meaning is to describe the meaning of speech acts. This in turn presupposes a theory of semantics and a theory of prosodic meaning, as well as a proper treatment of the co-operative principle, context and background information. These matters are dealt with in detail. The second task of a theory of linguistic meaning is to identify what meaning is, to explain the relationships between sense and denotation, and to explicate the nature of meaningful properties and meaning relations. These matters are fully covered, and the work concludes with a summary of the principle arguments presented.

part |435 pages

Volume 1

chapter 1|74 pages

Beginning an Account of Linguistic Meaning

Speaker, Hearer, Context, and Utterance

chapter 2|65 pages

What is meaning?

chapter 4|60 pages

Lexicon Semantics

chapter 5|118 pages

The semantic interpretation of sentences

A study of katz's semantic theory and post-katzian semantics

part

Volume 2

chapter 6|58 pages

Prosody and Meaning

chapter 7|105 pages

Informational aspects of the utterance

chapter 8|117 pages

Speech acts

chapter 9|18 pages

Epilogue: on linguistic meaning