SOCIO-PRAGMATIC APPROACH TO LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19953525
Annotasiya
The evolution of linguistic thought throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries demonstrates a steady movement from the analysis of language as a self-contained system toward the study of language as socially meaningful action. Classical structuralist approaches were highly productive in describing the organization of phonology, morphology, and syntax, yet they provided limited explanatory power when scholars attempted to account for real communicative behavior. Everyday interaction repeatedly reveals that speakers do not select linguistic forms solely on the basis of grammatical well-formedness. Instead, they choose forms that align with interpersonal goals, social expectations, cultural norms, and situational constraints. The socio-pragmatic approach developed precisely in order to explain this socially conditioned dimension of language use.
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