Article published In: On the Role of Pragmatics in Construction Grammar
Edited by Rita Finkbeiner
[Constructions and Frames 11:2] 2019
► pp. 270–289
Coercion
A case of saturation
Published online: 7 November 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/cf.00031.lec
https://doi.org/10.1075/cf.00031.lec
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to investigate the possibility of a cross-theoretical understanding of
coercion, a “kind of contextual enrichment/adjustment” (Lauwers, P., & Willems, D. (2011). Coercion: Definition and challenges, current approaches and new trends. Linguistics, 49(6), 1219–1235. : 1220), by combining insights from Construction Grammar and Relevance Theory. In Construction Grammar,
coercion has mostly been discussed in terms of the semantics of the linguistic items that occur in the sentence and how these
interact with each other. Relevance Theory, on the other hand, does not distinguish cases of coercion from other instances of
lexical adjustment, and discusses them in terms of the pragmatic principles involved during utterance interpretation. In order to
highlight the complementarity of the two perspectives, this paper particularly consists in pinning down their respective
explanatory limits. It will be shown that coercion is better described in terms of a linguistically required pragmatic process.
Therefore, it will be suggested that coercion might actually instantiate a particular type of saturation.
Keywords: coercion, saturation, Construction Grammar, Relevance Theory, semantics, pragmatics
Article outline
- 1.Background and aim
- 2.Relevance Theory and free pragmatic enrichment
- 3.Construction grammar: Coercion
- 4.Creation of ad hoc concepts or mismatch resolution: Respective limits
- 5.Coercion: A case of saturation
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
References
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