Pragmemes

Keith Allan

Table of contents

The term pragmeme was first used and described by Jacob Mey:

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References

Allan, Keith
2006 “Dictionaries and encyclopedias (relationship).” In Encyclopedia of Languages and Linguistics (2nd ed., Vol. 3), ed. by E. Keith Brown, 573–577. Oxford: Elsevier. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2013 “What is common ground?” In Perspectives on Linguistic Pragmatics, ed. by Alessandro Capone, Franco Lo Piparo and Marco Carapezza, 285–310. Cham: Springer. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2018 “Getting a grip on context as a determinant of meaning.” In Further Advances in Pragmatics and Philosophy. Part 1. From Theory to Practice, ed. by Alessandro Capone, Marco Carapezza and Franco Lo Piparo, 177–201. Cham: Springer. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kecskes, Istvan
2010 “Situation-bound utterances as pragmatic acts.” Journal of Pragmatics 42: 2889–2897 DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mey, Jacob L.
2001Pragmatics: An Introduction. (2nd ed.). Malden MA & Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
2016 “Why we need the pragmeme, or: speech acting and its peripeties.” In Pragmemes and Theories of Language Use, ed. by Keith Allan, Alessandro Capone and Istvan Kesckes, 133–140. Cham: Springer. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Stalnaker, Robert C.
2002 “Common ground.” Linguistics and Philosophy 25: 701–21. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2014Context. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sullivan, Arthur
2006 “Reference: Philosophical theories.” In Encyclopedia of Languages and Linguistics (2nd ed., Vol. 10), ed. by E. Keith Brown, 420–27. Oxford: Elsevier. DOI logoGoogle Scholar