Book contents
- Social Meaning and Linguistic Variation
- Social Meaning and Linguistic Variation
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Social Meaning and Linguistic Variation: Theoretical Foundations
- Part I Where Is (Social) Meaning?
- 2 Social Meaning and Sound Change
- 3 The Social Meaning of Syntax
- 4 The Social Meaning of Semantic Properties
- 5 Pragmatics and the Third Wave: The Social Meaning of Definites
- 6 The Cognitive Structure behind Indexicality: Correlations in Tasks Linking /s/ Variation and Masculinity
- Part II The Structure of Social Meaning
- Part III Meaning and Linguistic Change
- Index
- References
4 - The Social Meaning of Semantic Properties
from Part I - Where Is (Social) Meaning?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2021
- Social Meaning and Linguistic Variation
- Social Meaning and Linguistic Variation
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Social Meaning and Linguistic Variation: Theoretical Foundations
- Part I Where Is (Social) Meaning?
- 2 Social Meaning and Sound Change
- 3 The Social Meaning of Syntax
- 4 The Social Meaning of Semantic Properties
- 5 Pragmatics and the Third Wave: The Social Meaning of Definites
- 6 The Cognitive Structure behind Indexicality: Correlations in Tasks Linking /s/ Variation and Masculinity
- Part II The Structure of Social Meaning
- Part III Meaning and Linguistic Change
- Index
- References
Summary
How do the semantic and pragmatic properties of a linguistic expression inform its social meaning(s)? We show that the intensifiers totally in American English and -issimo in Italian are perceived as more salient carriers of social meaning in context that require substantial pragmatic work to be interpreted; that is, when they occur in the absence of a gradable predicate (e.g., “totally click on a link”), as opposed to when they target a lexically supplied scale (e.g. “totally full””). We suggest that two factors make these semantic variants particularly apt to serve as social indexes. First, in both cases the semantics of the intensifiers fosters a heightened degree of epistemic and evaluative convergence between the speaker and the hearer, making these expressions particularly apt to perform identity work at the interactional level. Second, both uses of totally and -issimo are linguistically marked with respect to their lexical counterparts. As such, they emerge as suitable linguistic resources to be used for stylistic purposes, in a similar fashion to what has been observed for marked variants in the domain of phonological, morphosyntactic, and pragmatic variation (Bender 2000; Campbell-Kibler 2007, Podesva 2011; Acton and Potts 2014).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Social Meaning and Linguistic VariationTheorizing the Third Wave, pp. 80 - 104Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
References
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