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Journal mutations
Part of
Relevance Theory, Figuration, and Continuity in Pragmatics
Edited by Agnieszka Piskorska
[
Figurative Thought and Language
8] 2020
► pp.
355
–
357
◄
previous
Subject index
A
adverbials
hearsay
76, 82, 87–89
illocutionary
76, 86
affect
83, 173, 186, 198,;
see also
emotions
affective interpretation
208–210
affective response
18, 196
ambiguity
61, 259–260, 263–266, 268, 281, 340–341
appropriation
239, 255
argumentation
9, 84, 95, 97–103, 105, 111–118 ;
see also
argumentative communication
assumption
contextual
17, 240
key
330, 345
target
330, 345
attitude
affective
346–347, 350
dissociative
4, 310–311, 313, 333, 338
propositional
70, 73, 124, 210–212, 310, 340, 346
B
belief
70, 72, 81, 87, 275, 279
intuitive
240
reflective
240, 256
believability
82, 97, 103, 113–114, 117
C
category extension
25–26, 28, 30–40
coherence
97, 101, 112–113, 115–116
communication
affective
202, 204, 217
argumentative
115, 330,;
see also
argumentation
communicator goals
95–96, 114
complementizer
121–123, 125, 133
comprehension
6, 18, 49, 54–55, 57–59, 70, 73, 88, 114, 124, 127–128, 179, 274, 284
irony
311
comprehension heuristic/procedure
54–55, 127, 177, 240, 275, 332
concept
ad hoc
3, 5, 27–29, 31–32, 36, 38, 339
broadening
5, 25–31, 36, 39, 203
narrowing
5, 27–30
non-lexicalized
28, 50, 53
connective
75, 95–96, 98–99, 102, 105–108, 111–114, 116
context
275, 281–282, 333–335
accessibility
337
continuity
2–5
contrast
168, 174–175, 178, 180, 186
Critical Discourse Analysis
235
D
deflationary approach to figurative language
2, 6–7
desirable utterances
122, 126, 130, 136–141, 146–160
disambiguation
340
E
echo/echoic use
2, 4–5, 130, 239, 252, 254, 310–314, 319, 330, 337, 346
effect
contextual
305, 333
cognitive
54–61, 127, 177, 182, 240, 271, 274, 279
cognitive, of strengthening
100, 103, 111, 305, 333,;
see also
strengthening
humorous
329–330, 333
of contrastiveness
182
positive cognitive
176, 243, 245–246, 254, 275, 291
pragmatic
6, 55, 201–204
stylistic
115, 332
emotions
18, 208–210, 230, 239–240, 251, 261, 277,;
see also
affect
encyclopaedic entries
28
enrichment
45–46, 52, 340, 342
free
52
epistemic stance
69
epistemic vigilance
69, 82–86, 112–116, 124, 128–129
evidence
69–70, 76–77, 81–82 ;
see also
evidentiality, evidentials
evidential participles
69–70, 81–88
evidentiality
81, 123–124
evidentials
9, 70, 82, 123–124, 128–130
expectations
hearer
176–178, 180–83, 186–88, 273–274
of relevance
2, 6, 19, 98, 114–117, 273–274, 276–283, 295, 344
explicature
49, 58–59, 73, 158, 274, 277, 294
higher–level
73, 86, 211–212, 340
eye-tracking
196, 213–217
F
figurative language
1–7, 9, 13, 17, 19, 20, 259, 284, 285, 327, 332, 348
G
gar
95–117
General Theory of Verbal Humour
330–31
Gricean maxims
267–270
H
hate speech
229–254
covert
234, 239–247, 253
direct
237, 253
indirect
237, 254
overt
229, 234, 237
highlighting
function of telops
196
natural
184–188, 201–202
hortatory material
98–99
humour
327–335
and irony
329–335
framing by telops
196, 199
I
Illocutionary act
235–36
implicated conclusion
294
Implication
background
333
foreground
333
implicature
49, 268, 291, 293–295, 301–302, 305
Gricean
301–302
strong
243, 246, 293–297, 302–305
weak
203–204, 208–209, 293–297, 302–305
incitement
to genocide
233, 252–253
to hatred
230–33 235–237
incongruity
329, 334
resolution of
331
Indus Kohistani
121–160
inferential processes
2, 6, 52–54, 179, 327, 340–345
intention
communicative
98, 176, 239, 275, 334–335
informative
97–98, 239, 275, 277–278
interjections
75, 184
interpretive use
89
irony
2, 4–6, 16, 130, 174, 309, 310–317, 327–335, 337–338 345–347
functions of
330
J
jab lines
331
K
Koine Greek
95, 116, 118
L
lexical modulation
26–30 33–34
literary texts, interpretation of
14–15, 19, 291–293, 295–297
locutionary act
235–236
loose use
26, 28–32, 42
M
marker
discourse
75, 86, 128, 130–135
of metarepresentation
131–135
procedural
95, 99–112
quotation
123–127
meaning
conceptual
248
figurative
63, 285, 346
literal
2–3, 28, 327–328,;
see also
(non)literalness
procedural
9, 75, 123, 128, 167, 176–179, 249
reversal of
317
metaphor
2–6, 28–31, 35, 186–187, 259, 283
metarepresentation
122, 129–131, 331
non–attributive
146–148
metonymy
8, 17, 45–62
modality
81, 123
deontic
81
epistemic
81
module
argumentative
95, 113–114
comprehension
84, 112, 113, 114, 116, 128
multimodality
193–204
mutual parallel adjustment
6, 55, 73, 343–344
N
narrative
95–99, 103–112, 116–117
(non)literalness
1–7, 28, 252
O
offensive terms
234, 237
orthography
175
P
paralinguistic information
167–175
parentheticals
76
paronomasia
261
perlocutionary act
80, 235–236
personal pronouns
86, 128, 295–297
persuasion
97–98, 112, 114–115
polysemy
46, 263
pragmatic routines
39–40
premises
explanatory
98
implicated
73, 240, 294, 342
procedural device
179–180
procedural encoding
122, 128–129, 249
procedural expressions
86, 178
procedural instructions
86, 99, 111, 249
prosody
167–168, 171–175, 178–179, 182, 184, 186
pun
61, 84, 197, 259–284
punch line
331
punctuation
171–175
Q
quasi-slurs
246–251
R
rationality
97–98, 113
reference assignment/resolution
168, 186, 181, 292, 295–297, 341–342
relevance
constraints on
99, 129
optimal
74, 127, 177, 180, 182, 240, 271, 332
reliability of information
73, 82–83, 112–113, 128–129
rhetorical displays
97
rhetorical forms
97–98
S
saturation of contextual sources
334
schemata
38–40
semantic indeterminacy
51
shallow processing
58–59, 64
slurs
229, 234, 237, 239, 244, 246, 247–253
snowclones
37–40
Speech Act Theory
71, 124, 235
strengthening
95, 99–103, 105, 111–112, 115, 117 ;
see also
cognitive effect of strengthening
style
6, 73–74, 167, 201, 328, 332
of St Mark’s Gospel
99, 112
T
telops
193–199, 204–218
testimony
97
third-person imperative
153–159
tortoise shell cat
291
translation
of irony
317–323
audiovisual
198–199
tropes
261–262, 268
twist in literary texts
295–297, 346
typography
167–188, 199–202, 204
V
vagueness
58, 60–61
verbal attack
232–234
W
wordplay
60, 264–266, 273