Speech Acts (Pragmatics)
Speech Acts (Pragmatics)
Speech Acts (Pragmatics)
(Pragmatics)
Group 4:
Annisa Nur Fitria Riska Lestari
Dini Handayani Sofiyatul Inayah
A. Speech Acts
When someone expresses something, he does not
Illocutionary
Act/Illocutionary Force
Perlocutionary
Act/Perlocutionary
Effect
An utterance that
produces literal
meaning
B. Illocutionary Act
Illocutionary act is the main focus of speech acts.
Illocutionary force from an utterance is what it
count as.
Example: Ill see you later. We could find three
different assumptions of its meaning.
(I predict that) Ill see you later => a prediction
(I promise you that) Ill see you later => a promise
(I warn you that) Ill see you later => a warning.
Felicity condition
1. IFIDs
Illocutionary Force Indicating Devices => an
a.
b.
c.
2. Felicity condition
To make the utterance can be recognize by the
Preparatory condition
Essential condition
Declaration
Representative
Expressive
Directive
Commissive
1. Declaration
Speech acts that change the world via their
utterance/word.
For example:
a) Priest: I now pronounce you husband and wife.
b) Referee: Youre out!
c) Judge: I sentence you to six months in prison!
2. Representative
Speech acts that state what speaker believes to be the
case or not.
Fact, assertions, conclusions, descriptions =>
representing the world as he believes it is.
The speaker makes the words fit the world (of
belief).
For example:
a) The earth is flat.
b) Chomsky didnt write about peanuts.
c) It was a warm sunny day.
3. Expressive
Speech acts that state what speaker feels.
Psychological expression => pleasure, pain, likes,
4. Directive
Speech acts that speaker use to get someone else to
do something.
Command, orders, requests, suggestion => can be
positive or negative.
The speaker attempts to make the world fit the
words (via hearer).
For example:
a) Gimme a cup of coffee. Make it black.
b) Could you lend me a pen, please?
c) Dont touch that.
5. Commissive
Speech acts that speakers use to commit themselves
Direction of fit
S = Speaker, X =
Situation
Declarations
S causes X
Representative
S believes X
Expressive
S feels X
Directives
S wants X
Commissive
S intends X
question)
c. Plant a mango tree! (imperativecommand/request).
.There is an easily recognized relationship between
three structural forms (declarative, interrogative,
imperative) and three general communication
function (statement, question, command/request).
(interrogative-command)
c) Youre standing in front of the TV. (declarativecommand)
Could you open the window?
The utterance not only needs the answer
Yes/No, but it also asks the hearer to do
something. Interrogative sentence as a
command (indirect speech act).
F. Speech Event
Speech act => one person trying to get another