The two steps in intention-based semantics are ( 1 ) to define utterer's meaning in terms of speakers'overt audience-directed intentions, and then ( 2 ) to define timeless meaning in terms of utterer's meaning.
12.
The two steps in intention-based semantics are ( 1 ) to define utterer's meaning in terms of speakers'overt audience-directed intentions, and then ( 2 ) to define timeless meaning in terms of utterer's meaning.
13.
I would have considered the usage of the word " warn " insincere; I would call that a threat, because the utterer cares more for their own wellbeing than for the other side's . & mdash; Sebastian 21 : 28, 5 August 2009 ( UTC)
14.
Grice makes it clear that he takes saying to be a kind of meaning, in the sense that doing the former entails doing the latter : " I want to say that ( 1 ) " U ( utterer ) said that p " entails ( 2 ) " U did something x by which U meant that p " ( 87 ).
15.
Section 3 provided that a person who committed an offence under section 2 and then committed the same offence again within 10 days, or was found in possession of more counterfeit money within 10 days was to be deemed " a common utterer of false money " and sentenced to 1 year imprisonment and then provide sureties for his good behaviour for another 2 years.
16.
An example of clinomorphic tendency would be in the case of autism or Asperger syndrome where particular characteristics of these syndromes ( such as the limitations on the ability of a sufferer to form a mental model of the state of mind of another person ) would be clinomorphically used as a metaphor or simile for someone's behaviour, where the individual being described clinomorphically is not in fact believed by the utterer to be a sufferer of the condition in question.
17.
The word attack is entirely subjective : sharks and crocs are usually trying to " eat "'us'( though this is usually tourists, not Australians ), the same may be said of those packs of mongrel dingoes; for spiders and snakes it is as H has described; the roos would usually be defending themselves, a fact I recently saw noted in a pamphlet from 1834; proffering a view on humans and stingrays is possibly distasteful and leaves the utterers, no matter how " germane " the comment, open to attack.