THE COMPREHENSION OF OSTEN-
SIBLE SPEECH ACTSKRISTEN E. LINK
State University of New York College at OswegoROGER J. KREUZ
The University of MemphisOstensible speech acts (OSAs) have been defined as possessing pretense, mutual recognition, collusion, ambivalence, and an off-record purpose. These researchers also noted that several features occur more often in ostensible than sincere speech (e.g., speaker hedges, violates preparatory conditions). The authors examined the role of these defining and characteristic features in the comprehension of OSAs. Participants read conversations containing sincere, ambiguous, or ostensible speech acts, and provided ratings of "goodness," pretense, or mutual recognition, predicted the next speech act, judged the attitude of the speaker, or indicated the reason for the speech act. Participants differentiated between ostensible, ambiguous, and sincere speech in their "goodness" ratings, they perceived the defining features in OSAs, but not in sincere speech,and the characteristic features served as cues that an utterance was ostensible. These results support Isaacs and Clark's description of OSAs.
Keywords: pragmatics; comprehension; ostensible speech acts; nonserious language;
ambivalence; and (linguistic) pretenseBack to Roger Kreuz's home page.JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY,
Vol. 24 No. 3, September 2005 1-25
DOI: 10.1177/0261927X05278384
© 2005 Sage Publications