Communicative texts and rules of linguistic dialogue
Keywords:
Intentionality, Acceptability, Coherence, SituationalityAbstract
This topic addresses the foundations and principles that govern the production and reception of communicative texts, whether written or oral, focusing particularly on the rules of linguistic dialogue as a fundamental form of communication. A communicative text is any linguistic unit (sentence, paragraph, article, dialogue) produced to convey a message or achieve a specific communicative purpose between a sender and a receiver. For a text to be communicative and effective, it must possess the following characteristics: Intentionality: The sender must have a clear objective in producing the text. Acceptability: The receiver must expect a relevant and useful text. Coherence: The use of linguistic and grammatical tools to connect the parts of the text. Coherence: The logical and semantic connection of the text's ideas. Situationality: The text's suitability to the external context in which it was produced. Informativeness: The text's inclusion of new or unexpected information for the receiver. Finally, intertextuality:
Understanding the text relies on previous texts or shared knowledge between the parties.
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