“How's the wife?”: Pragmatic reasoning in spousal reference
“How's the wife?”: Pragmatic reasoning in spousal reference
In the vein of recent research at the intersection of semantics, pragmatics, and sociolinguistics (Eckert, 2019; Beltrama, 2020), the current study illuminates the complex interrelations between encoded meaning, pragmatic reasoning, and the social matrix within which language is used and interpreted. Our empirical focus is spousal reference: specifically, the use and interpretation of the form the wife/husband, where use of a possessive pronoun (POSS) instead of the is possible. We show that pragmatic reasoning over the relevant expressions’ form and semantics offers a principled set of core motivations for choosing the over POSS in spousal reference. At the same time, we present an analysis of attested examples, meta-linguistic commentary on the wife/husband, and a matched-guise perception experiment that together show that how the expressions and the people who use them are ultimately evaluated depends crucially on multiple contextual factors, including whose spouse is being referred to, and—as research on language and gender would lead one to expect—whether the spousal term is wife or husband. Taken together, this study underscores the need for careful consideration of the role of both cultural and discourse context in social perception studies and, more generally, for a holistic approach to language use, variation, and interpretation.
Definite article, Perception, Pragmatics, Semantics, Sociolinguistics
152-170
Hunt, Matthew
bbe04f7d-80d0-4e89-ab04-56c4f8bab134
Acton, Eric
8eead435-bac9-4567-bc87-9e53e611ecae
January 2022
Hunt, Matthew
bbe04f7d-80d0-4e89-ab04-56c4f8bab134
Acton, Eric
8eead435-bac9-4567-bc87-9e53e611ecae
Hunt, Matthew and Acton, Eric
(2022)
“How's the wife?”: Pragmatic reasoning in spousal reference.
Journal of Pragmatics, 188, .
(doi:10.1016/j.pragma.2021.11.005).
Abstract
In the vein of recent research at the intersection of semantics, pragmatics, and sociolinguistics (Eckert, 2019; Beltrama, 2020), the current study illuminates the complex interrelations between encoded meaning, pragmatic reasoning, and the social matrix within which language is used and interpreted. Our empirical focus is spousal reference: specifically, the use and interpretation of the form the wife/husband, where use of a possessive pronoun (POSS) instead of the is possible. We show that pragmatic reasoning over the relevant expressions’ form and semantics offers a principled set of core motivations for choosing the over POSS in spousal reference. At the same time, we present an analysis of attested examples, meta-linguistic commentary on the wife/husband, and a matched-guise perception experiment that together show that how the expressions and the people who use them are ultimately evaluated depends crucially on multiple contextual factors, including whose spouse is being referred to, and—as research on language and gender would lead one to expect—whether the spousal term is wife or husband. Taken together, this study underscores the need for careful consideration of the role of both cultural and discourse context in social perception studies and, more generally, for a holistic approach to language use, variation, and interpretation.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 6 November 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 January 2022
Published date: January 2022
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Economics and Social Research Council via the London Interdisciplinary Social Sciences Doctoral Training Partnership.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.
Keywords:
Definite article, Perception, Pragmatics, Semantics, Sociolinguistics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 471333
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471333
ISSN: 0378-2166
PURE UUID: 520d9600-07fe-404e-8ff5-e8e7a6d01cdc
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Date deposited: 03 Nov 2022 17:43
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 22:33
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Author:
Matthew Hunt
Author:
Eric Acton
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