What is Said and What is Meant in Speech and Writing
Abstract
This paper advances and experimentally evaluates the argument that in ordinary oral language the intentions of the speaker (what is meant) has primacy over the actual expressions used (what is said). In reading and writing this relationship is reversed. The cognitive consequences of attention to linguistic form (what is said), a form of metalinguistic competence, and the possible origins of this competence are discussed.Downloads
Published
																			1982-04-01
																	
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								Journal Article
							
						 
							