Table of contents for English : meaning and culture / Anna Wierzbicka.


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Part I. Meaning, History and Culture
1. English as a Cultural Universe                                 3
1.1. English-the most widely used language in the world        3
1.2. English and Englishes                                     5
1.3. An illustration: Words, scripts, and human lives          7
1.4. "Anglo English" as a historical formation                 9
1.5. The tendency to mistake "Anglo English" for the human norm  11
1.6. The cultural underpinnings of (Anglo) English            13
1.7. A framework for studying and describing meaning           16
2. Anglo Cultural Scripts Seen through
Middle Eastern Eyes                                            20
2.1. Linguistics and intercultural cCommunication             20
2.2. The theory of cultural scripts                            22
2.3. The Anglo ideal of "accuracy" and the practice
of "understatement"                                        25
2.4. "To the best of my knowledge .. ."                        35
2.5. Anglo respect for "facts"                                 41
2.6. "Cool reason": to think vs. to feel                      46
2.7. To compel or not to compel? The value of autonomy         50
2.8. Conclusion                                                56
Part II. English Words: From Philosophy
to Everyday Discourse
3. The Story of RIGHT and WRONG and Its Cultural Implications    61
3.1. Introduction                                             61
3.2. "Right" and "wrong": A basis for ethics?                 64
33.3 The link between "right" and "reason"                         70
3.4. "That's right"                                                74
3.5. An illustration: English vs. Italian                          76
3.6. "Right" as a neutral ground between "good" and "true"         78
3.7. Procedural morality                                           80
3.8. "Right" and "wrong": Increasingly asymmetrical                82
3.9. The changing frequencies of true, truth, right, and wrong     85
3.10. "Right" as a response in dialogue                             87
3.11. "Right" and cultural scripts                                  92
3.12. Retrospect and conclusion: The Puritans, the Enlightenment,
the growth of democracy                                        95
4. Being REASONABLE: A Key Anglo Value and
Its Cultural Roots                                                103
4.1, Introduction                                                 103
4.2. The pre-Enlightenment uses of "reasonable"                   104
4.3. The main themes in the modern meanings
of the word reasonable                                        105
4.4. "A reasonable man"                                           107
4.5. "It is reasonable to" think (say, do) ...                     112
4.6. "Reasonable doubt"                                            117
4.7. "Reasonable force" and "reasonable care"                      123
4.8. "A reasonable time," "A reasonable amount"                    125
4.9. "Reasonable" as "reasonably good"                             127
4.10. "Reasonable" and "unreasonable"                              128
4.n. An internal reconstruction of the semantic history
of "reasonable"                                                133
4.12. "Reasonable" and Anglo cultural scripts                      135
4.13. Is the Anglo value of "reasonable" unique? English vs. French  138
5. Being FAIR: Another Key Anglo Value and
Its Cultural Underpinnings                                         141
5.1. The importance of "fairness" in modern Anglo culture         141
5.2. The meaning of fair and not fair                             144
5.3. "Fairness" and Anglo political philosophy                    152
5.4. "Fairness" vs. "justice"                                     155
5.5. The illusion of universality                                 160
5.6. "Fairness" and "fair play": A historical perspective         163
5.7. "Fairness" and "procedural morality"                         165
Part III. Anglo Culture Reflected in English Grammar
6. The English Causatives: Causation and Interpersonal Relations      171
6.1. The cultural elaboration of causation                         171
6.2. The English "let"-constructions and the cultural ideal
of "noninterference"                                          183
7. I THINK: The Rise of Epistemic Phrases in Modern English          204
7.1. Introduction                                                 204
7.2. I think                                                      208
7.3. I suppose                                                    208
7.4. I guess                                                      209
7.5. I gather                                                     210
7.6. 1 presume                                                     212
7-7. I believe                                                     213
7.8. I find                                                       220
7.9. 1 expect                                                     226
7.10. 1 take It                                                    230
7.11. 1 understand                                                 233
7.12. 1 imagine                                                    235
7.13. I bet                                                        236
7.14. I suspect                                                    237
7.15. 1 assume                                                     239
7.16. Conclusion                                                   241
8. PROBABLY: English Epistemic Adverbs and
Their Cultural Significance                                       247
8.1. Introduction                                                 247
8.2. Developing a format for the semantic analysis
of epistemic adverbs                                          257
8.3. "Probably" and "likely": The heart of the category
of epistemic adverbs                                          261
8.4. "Confident" adverbs: Evidently, clearly, obviously           270
8.5. "Nonconfident" adverbs: Possibly and conceivably             276
8.6. Hearsay adverbs: Apparently, supposedly, allegedly,
and reportedly                                                278
8.7. The "uncertain" status of certainly                          284
8.8. Episternic adverbs vs. discourse particles                   287
8.9. The history of epistemic adverbs in modern english           291
Part IV. Conclusion
9. The "Cultural Baggage" of English and Its Significance
in the World at Large                                             299
9.1. The legacy of history                                        299
9.2. Living with concepts                                         300
9.3. Two illustrations: International law and international aviation  301
9.4. Communication and "vibes"                                    305
9.5. Intercultural communication and cross-cultural education     308
9.6. English in the world today                                    310
Notes                                                                315
References                                                           325



Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: English language Semantics, Great Britain Civilization, English-speaking countries Civilization, English language Foreign countries, Language and languages Philosophy