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Á¦¸ñ A Gricean Approach to Referring Terms in Discourse
ÀúÀÚ Hur, Mi Jin ³âµµ 2012 ½Ã±â °¡À»
Ãâó 2012³â ´ëÇѾð¾îÇÐȸ °¡À» Çмú´ëȸ ¹ßÇ¥³í¹®Áý
³í¹®°ÔÀçÀÏ 2012. 10. 20
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A television talk show has become highly popular form of communication and conversation lately. It represents spontaneous forms of conversation and direct address to the audience, and provides a lively conversation by listening to and eliciting information from a wide range of guests. While participating in this vigorous conversation, it seems like many guests use various reference terms about things the audience may want to know more about. When a quick-paced interview takes place, the audience may have to give special attention to reference terms in order to properly interpret the guests utterances which are not mutually shared. In this sense, an intended referent can be cooperated with both the speakers' and the hearers' point of view depending on indefinite/definite, and explicit/inexplicit referring terms. The difference in both definiteness and explicitness among referring terms can be associated not just with pragmatics but also with the Gricean maxims of quantity and relevance. In this project, a particular script from Oprah Winfrey Show is used to analyze referring sequences. In this study, referring terms will be analyzed by the perspective of Gricean pragmatics.

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