Expressive meaning
pp. 325-333
in: Frank Liedtke, Astrid Tuchen (eds), Handbuch Pragmatik, Stuttgart, Metzler, 2018Abstract
The term ›expressivity‹ or ›expressive meaning‹ has a long tradition in linguistics. Roman Jakobson, building on Karl Bühler (1934), coined the term ›expressive‹ or ›emotive‹ for one of the functions of language. He describes it as the function »focused on the ADDRESSER [speaker], aims a direct expression of the speaker's attitude toward what he is speaking about« (Jakobson 1960: 354) and gives interjections as the prime example of this function. The separation between emotive language and referential (or descriptive) language is clear in his characterization of interjections: »they are not components but equivalents of sentences« (Jakobson 1960: 354). Although there is significant overlap between this definition and later ones, later accounts of expressive meaning, starting with D. Alan Cruse (1986), focus on diagnostics that underlie the distinction between expressive meaning and descriptive or truth-conditional meaning, the latter being meaning that can be explicitly denied and objectively verified in the actual world (cf. Lyons 1977).