Unit 21 Study Guide and Exercises
Unit 21 Study Guide and Exercises
1. You should understand these terms and concepts from this unit:
2. Explain what it means to say that actions and words are not entirely distinct. Give an example.
To some extent, speech itself is action, and we can use language to do things.
For example, when someone asks you to wash the car, she is using words to
perform an action of requesting you to wash the car.
3. What does it mean to say that actions can be performed with words (i.e. with an utterance)?
What are such acts called?
4. For each of the following utterances state one or two purposes that the speaker may have had
in mind when uttering them. Explain how such utterances exemplify the descriptive fallacy.
These utterances exemplify the descriptive fallacy in that they do more than
just describe some state of affairs: they actually perform speech acts of various
kinds.
5. Try to identify the kind(s) of acts mentioned in your answer to question 4 above (such as
warning, requesting, ordering, complaining, apologizing, etc.).
Some speech acts were already mentioned. Others are possible and may vary.
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© James R. Hurford, Brendan Heasley and Michael B. Smith 2007
ANSWER KEY Semantics: a coursebook
a. declare e. write
b. warn f. approve ('to OK something’)
c. think g. remind
d. promise h. consider
9. Identify which of the following utterances are performative. Also identify the utterances which
are exceptions to the conventions you mentioned in the answer to the previous question. Explain
why they are exceptions. Performative utterances are in boldface.
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© James R. Hurford, Brendan Heasley and Michael B. Smith 2007
ANSWER KEY Semantics: a coursebook
10. Why do we talk about utterances being perfomative (rather than sentences or propositions)?
Utterances are performative because they are context bound and evoke
speaker meaning at the moment of speaking. Sentences and the propositions
expressed by sentences are independent of the context.
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© James R. Hurford, Brendan Heasley and Michael B. Smith 2007