Abstract

This paper examines evaluatives in Modern Standard Chinese, a small group of rarely studied linguistic expressions like xingyundeshi ‘fortunately’ and buxing(de) ‘unfortunately’ that represent the speaker's value judgments or emotions with regard to the proposition to which they are attached. Also examined is the Gricean notion of conventional implicature in terms of speaker belief. It is argued that the semantics of Chinese evaluatives is better explained within a revised neo-Gricean framework of conventional implicature, built on the central idea that conventional implicature involves the speaker's exhibitive expression of her subjective beliefs. By so doing, this article provides implications for a better interpretation of Grice's theory of speaker meaning and a better understanding of evaluatives in Chinese and other languages.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call