Speech Act Theory
Speech Act Theory
Boucif
Speech acts: Utterances which, in saying, do things. The sentence Leave, for instance, is a
directive whose purpose is to get someone to depart.
Speech act theory originated in the work of the philosopher J. Austin (1962) and was further
developed by J.R. Searle (1969).
Austin (1962) made an initial distinction between constative utterances, such as ‘The cat sat
on the mat’ which is a statement of fact and could be seen either true or false; and
performative utterances, such as ‘I warn you not to touch that’ which performs the act of
warning. Warn is a performative verb.
Examples
1. ‘Would you like a cup of coffee?’ the illocution (the act performed by the speaker) :
Offer
3. Neighbour to recently bereaved widow: ‘I was so sorry to hear about your loss.’
Condoling
8. One chess player to another: ‘I just made a bad move’ Confessing / admission
1
9. Lecturer to student: ‘ You will find the book on Swahili infinitives quite fascinating’
Recommending
11. ‘after you’ (said to someone wishing to go through the same door as the speaker)
Giving a way
12. Lady at ticket office in railway station: ‘I’d like a day return to Morecambe, please’
Request
13. Mother to child who is eating untidily: ‘Look at the mess you’ve made under your
chair’ Asserting
18. Man helping a blind man across a road: “Watch the step” Warning