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1、interpretations of conversational implicature in listening comprehension解读听力理解中的会话含意abstract: china today is demanding her college graduates with full competence of english. the ability to understand what is being said to is one of the main requirements for college students. so in college english li

2、stening comprehension classroom, it is vital important to develop the students competence to understand the meaning of what is being said when exposed to a short conversation, and then can they take a further actionto make a choice, filling the blanks, or answer the questions. a lot of times the con

3、versation is straightforward and direct so you can judge what is being said through the literal meaning, that is, the original meaning of the words. however there are cases that it seems the conversation is not quite to the norm and indirect so you cannot make the right judgment if you only take it

4、for granted from its literal meaning. so for the listeners in listening comprehension classroom, it is most important that they should be aware the two speakers in a conversation is observing one common principlethe cooperative principle (cp), which generates the meaning of the whole conversation: s

5、ometimes obvious and direct; sometimes implied and expressed in a round-about way. the latter is what we called the conversational implicature, and it is the focus to student listeners in inferring the real meaning from a conversation.this paper first examines grices cooperative principle and the ev

6、oking of conversational implicatures, then goes into the probe of conversational implicature interpretations in college english listening comprehension classroom: the model of interpretation, the model of formal instruction and the possibilities to enhance the students listening comprehension compet

7、ence. the author tries to illustrate that at present classroom instruction of college english, it is necessary for the teacher to focus on the culture teaching and the well-chosen pedagogies for a better outcome in the listening comprehension class, which will enhance the development of students ove

8、rall english competence. key words: the cooperative principle interpretations of conversational implicature listening comprehensiontable of contenti. introduction. 1ii. cooperative principle and the conversational implicature. 21. cooperative principle . 22. sentence-meaning and speaker-meaning63. c

9、onversation implicature. 9iii. listening comprehension.1. a definition of listening comprehension. .2. parsing-understanding the syntactic structure of sentences 3. comprehension. .3.1 prior knowledge. .3.3 construction-integration model of comprehension 4. factors affecting second language listenin

10、g  comprehensioniv. developing the competence of implicature interpretation in listening comprehension classroom. .1. the classification of conversation that involves conversational implicature in listening comprehension. .2. what type do the students find easy or difficult to interpret the imp

11、licature?3. culture and the interpretation of implicature . v. developing the competence of implicature interpretation through the instruction in classroom. 1. the processes of l2 listening and listening comprehension. 2. the pedagogic approach to the development of the competence of the implicature

12、 acquirement in second language listening comprehension. 2.1 what constitutes the development of l2 listening comprehension? 2.2 a consensus approach to the development of l2 listening comprehension. 2.3. input for l2 listening comprehension 3. what should be considered when selecting listening tech

13、niques and activities in interpretation of conversational implicatures? vi. classroom procedures.1. pre-listeningthe preparation stage of the teaching of listening in interpretation of conversational implicatures.2. while-listeningthe key stage of the teaching of listening3. post-listeningan indispe

14、nsable part of the teaching of listening4. teachers position in the teaching of listening in interpretation of conversational implicatures. vii. conclusion.references. 16appendix. 20i. introduction china today is demanding her college graduates with full competence of english. the ability to underst

15、and what is being said to is one of the main requirements for college students, which is vividly demonstrated in cet-4 & cet-6 listening comprehension part. so in college english listening comprehension classroom, it is vital important to develop the students competence to understand the meaning

16、 of what is being said when exposed to a short conversation, and then can they take a further actionto make a choice, filling the blanks, or answer the questions. a lot of times the conversation is straightforward and direct so you can judge what is being said through the literal meaning, that is, t

17、he original meaning of the words. however there are cases that it seems the conversation is not quite to the norm and indirect so you cannot make the right judgment if you only take it for granted from its literal meaning. the following two examples will illustrate the points:(1) a: can you tell me

18、what time is it now?b: its nine.(2) a: can you tell me the time?b: well, the milkman has come. in conversation (1) b gives the direct and relevant answer to as question, and the listener is easy to infer the meaning: they are talking about time, and now its nine oclock. in the case of conversation (

19、2), the two speakers are also talking about time, but b doesnt give the direct answer to as question instead by suggesting another topic. it seems quite irrelevant in the surface structure level as far as the question-answer content is concerned. if we believe that the two people in the conversation

20、 are rational and that their conversation is meaningful, we would hold the supposition that the answer must be relevant to the question and we will probe further to interpret more than the literal meaning of the sentence by applying the other way round. suppose the milkman usually comes at nine oclo

21、ck in the morning, the sentence “the milkman has come “ means most probably that the time for now is already nine oclock in the morning. so for the listeners in listening comprehension classroom, it is most important that they should be aware the two speakers in a conversation is observing one commo

22、n principlethe cooperative principle (cp), which generates the meaning of the whole conversation: sometimes obvious and direct; sometimes implied and expressed in a round-about way. the latter is what we called the conversational implicature, and it is the focus to student listeners in inferring the

23、 real meaning from a conversation. ii. cooperative principle and the conversational implicature1. cooperative principle in 1975, the philosopher of language h.p.grice (1975) published a seminal article entitled "the co-operative principle" that created quite a stir on the linguistic scene

24、and generated a large number of linguistic publications that built on grice's postulates. the basic assumption is that any discourse, whether written or spoken, is a joint effort. both the speaker and the addressee have to follow certain pragmatic, syntactic, and semantic rules in order to commu

25、nicate effectively. they have to co-operate. grice's co-operative principle consists of several maxims that appear very simple, straightforward, and common-sensical at first sight. grice (1975) observed that conversations, like other human interactions, are governed by a cooperative principle, t

26、elling that you should "make your conversational contribution such as is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged". this implies, i.e., that you need not and should not supply information which you can ass

27、ume that your audience already has - just as suggested by the principles of necessity and sufficiency. from his cooperative principle, grice derived a set of maxims concerning what should be said in a conversation and how it should be said. what should be said n1. make your contribution as informati

28、ve as is required (for the current purposes of the exchange).n2. do not make your contribution more informative than is required.q1. do not say what you believe to be false.q2. do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence.r1. be relevant how it should be said m1. avoid obscurity of expressio

29、n.m2. avoid ambiguity.m3. be brief (avoid unnecessary prolixity).m4. be orderly. abbreviations: n quantity, q quality, r relation, m manner.lets examine the maxims carefully.quality: "be informative"this maxim means that the speaker/writer has to include all the information that the addres

30、see requires to understand. if the speaker leaves out a crucial piece of information, the addressee will not understand what the speaker is trying to say. but it is not necessary for the speaker/writer to provide the information that is not necessary or required.quantity: "be brief"the mea

31、ning of this maxim is that the speaker/writer should avoid including unnecessary, redundant information in his contribution. if the speaker rambles on without saying anything new or informative, the addressee will lose interest in the discourse very quickly and stop paying attention. the two maxims

32、"be informative" and "be brief" are in a natural state of tension with each other. maximum informativeness automatically includes a certain amount of repetition and redundance. maximum brevity entails leaving out information that some addressees may find important while others wo

33、uld consider it superfluous. erring on the side of informativeness means that every addressee will be able to understand the message, but many of the more intelligent or more knowledgeable ones will get bored with it, because the discourse does not move fast enough. boredom almost always leads to in

34、attentiveness. erring on the side of brevity, on the other hand, comes with the price that some addressees will not understand the content of the communication. not understanding the discourse makes the addressee feel left out. it leads to frustration, and frustration often leads to inattentiveness

35、as well. every discourse is a balancing act between the two extremes. the speaker has to ask himself: "how much information do i have to include so that my addressee understands what i am trying to say? how little information can i get away with, without losing my addressee?" the tension b

36、etween the two opposite demands can be subsumed under linguistic economy. it exists on many different levels, syntactic, phonetic, pragmatic, and semantic. it is one of the driving forces behind linguistic change. consciously or unconsciously, it is also a driving force behind our personal evolution

37、 as riders. we all strive to become more effective with our seat and aids - and effectiveness is nothing other than finding the perfect balance between informativeness and brevity, as well as lightness, in our aids. the rider always has to ask himself questions like: "how little leg can i get a

38、way with, before the horse loses impulsion? how light can my rein contact be, before the cycle of energy is interrupted and the horse falls apart? how small can my aid be for the next movement or transition?" "be relevant"relevance is an extremely important principle in linguistics, a

39、nd entire books have been written just on the role of relevance in language. in the context of h.p.grice's co-operative principle, the demand for relevance simply means that the speaker/writer should only include information in his communication that is relevant to the discourse topic. on our cl

40、assical dressage discussion list we had numerous examples in the past where people posted things that were not relevant in the narrower sense of the word to the training of a dressage horse in the classical tradition. it is interesting to observe that the perceptions of what is relevant and what is

41、irrelevant diverges among people. this shows that relevance is a matter of degree, not something absolute. in linguistics that is quite typical. hardly anything is set in stone, almost everything is a matter of degree or statistical frequency. the same thing applies to riding as well. based on the c

42、ircumstances of the individual situation, the specific application of the general principles can vary significantly. "be truthful"the applicability of truthfulness to riding may not be immediately obvious. in linguistic terms the maxim of truthfulness refers to the importance of only makin

43、g statements we believe to be true. the reason is that if we get caught making false statements we lose our credibility, which is one of the most important social assets a person can have. obviously, in real life this maxim is often violated in order to deceive the addressee. in less serious context

44、s, it can be violated in an obvious manner when the speaker tells a joke or teases the addressee. manner: "be polite" truthfulness and politeness are of philosophical and moral rather than grammatical significance in linguistics. the demand for politeness simply means that we should treat

45、other people as we would like to be treated - verbally and otherwise. in an equestrian context, we could substitute "be polite" with "be kind". as riders we should always strive to achieve our goals with as much kindness and consideration for the horse as possible - without pampe

46、ring the horse on the other hand. in situations that warrant a reprimand, we should always maintain the attitude towards the horse that: "i'm your friend, but you can't be rude to me." everything we do should be guided by genuine affection for the individual horse we are riding, no

47、t just by the idea of loving the species equus. continuing this train of thought, kindness also implies that we will not exploit a horse to gain personal fame or fortune, that we will not ask anything of the horse that he is unable to fulfill without incurring physical or psychological damage. in ot

48、her words, the well-being of the horse has to outweigh any other consideration.2. sentence-meaning and speaker-meaningin general terms, grice can be grouped with austin, searle, and the later wittgenstein as “theorists of communication-intention” (miller 1998:223, strawson 1971:172). the belief of t

49、his group is that intention/speaker-meaning is the central concept in communication, and that sentence-meaning can be explained (at least in part) in terms of it. this is in contrast to the truth-conditional theorists (e.g. frege) who believe that sentence-meaning via truth conditions is the gold st

50、andard, which has to be prior to any explication of speaker-meaning. an important aim of the gricean program is to manage a watertight definition of sentence-meaning in terms of speaker-intention. this, and the dialogue which it provokes, are the subject of grice (1957, 1968, 1969,1982).grice (1957)

51、 is concerned with the types of meaning which can be identified in language. the first distinction made is between natural meaning and nonnatural meaning:(3) (a) those spots meant measles.(b) those spots meant measles, and he had measles.(c) *those spots meant measles, but he hadnt got measles.(d) t

52、hose spots didnt mean measles, and he didnt have measles.adapted from grice (1957:377)in example (3a), the relationship between spots and measles is a natural one; one cannot state this relationship and then deny that it is true (3c). both propositions p mean(spots,measles) and q have(x,measles) mus

53、t have the same truth value for the sentence to make sense (3b & 3d). in semantic terms, p meant that q entails q. (4) (a) those three rings on the bell (of the bus) mean that the bus is full.(b) those three rings on the bell (of the bus) mean that the bus is full, and in fact, the bus is full.(

54、c) those three rings on the bell (of the bus) mean that the bus is full, but in fact, the conductor has got it wrong and the bus isnt full.adapted from grice (1957:377-8)in the examples above, the relationship between the ringing of the bell and the bus being full is a nonnatural one. essentially, t

55、he meaning is conveyed because of a conventional link between that signal and the intended meaning. there is no natural reason why three rings rather than one or two should convey this meaning, it is simply an accepted fact. grice terms this as meaningnn, and his contention is that much of language

56、is concerned with this type of non-natural meaning. he uses the following formula to represent this:“sentence x meantnn something (on a particular occasion).”this concept of meaningnn is then taken beyond the level of a particular instance of meaning, and is applied to first sentence-meaning and the

57、n speaker-meaning. this idea is explained in a simplified fashion in this quotation from grice (1968):“u meant (nonnaturally) something by uttering x”, which can be formulated as “for some audience a, u intended his utterance of x to produce in a some effect (response) e, by means of as recognition

58、of that intention.”grice (1968:58, our emphasis)the important aspect to notice here is the emphasis which grice places on the role of speaker-intention in the process of meaning-recognition. this is the first step towards his reductive theory of speaker and sentence meaning which is fleshed out more fully in grice (1969). here, two stages are proposed:(1) speaker-meaningnn is explained in terms of utterers intentions.(2) sentence-meaningnn is explained in terms of s

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