•  8
    Sulla versione latina delle Epistole a Cledonio
    Augustinianum 55 (2): 381-403. 2015.
    This contribution focuses attention on the lexical and syntactic features of the Latin version of the Letters to Cledonius: In the passages examined it highlights the differences between the translation and the Greek text, recreates the practices and the strategies of the translator, with particular reference to the two Letters and in some cases to other of Gregory of Nazianzen's texts as reported in Laur. San Marco 584. Lastly the article evaluates the genuineness of the Latin text that was han…Read more
  •  42
    review of Higginbotham et al. Speaking of events
  •  929
    Knowing how and pragmatic intrusion
    Intercultural Pragmatics 8 (4): 543-570. 2011.
    knowing how and pragmatic intrusion
  •  1
    Stati, Sorin, Principi di analisi argomentativa (2002) (review)
    Argumentation 17 (3): 347-350. 2003.
  •  73
    The pragmatics of quotation, explicatures and modularity of mind
    Pragmatics and Society 4 (3): 259-284. 2013.
    This paper presents a purely pragmatic account of quotation which, it is argued, will be able to accommodate all relevant linguistic phenomena. Given that it is more parsimonious to explain the data by reference to pragmatic principles only than to explain them by reference to both pragmatic and semantic principles, as is common in the literature, I conclude that the account of quotation I present is to be preferred to the more standard accounts (including the alternative theories of quotation, …Read more
  •  37
    Pragmemes
    Journal of Pragmatics 37 1355-1371. 2005.
    pragmemes JL Mey
  •  914
    Default semantics and the architecture of the mind
    Journal of Pragmatics 43. 2011.
    Relationship between default semantics and modularity of mind (in particular mind reading through the principle of Relevance).
  •  102
    Attitudes De Se: Linguistics, Epistemology, Metaphysics (edited book)
    with Neil Feit
    CSLI Publications. 2013.
    In English, we use the word "I" to express thoughts that we have about ourselves, and we use the reflexive pronouns "himself" and "herself" to attribute such thoughts to others. Philosophers and linguists call such thoughts, and the statements we use to express them, de se. De se thoughts and statements, although they appear often in our day-to-day lives, pose a series of challenging problems for both linguists and philosophers. This interdisciplinary volume examines the structure of de se tho…Read more
  •  707
    attributive/referential. Pragmatic intrusion.
  •  735
    Review of Higginbotham ed. Speaking of events (review)
    Linguistics 39 (6). 2001.
    review of Higginbotham et al. A Davidsonian approach.
  •  976
    On Grice's circle
    Journal of Pragmatics 38 645-669. 2006.
  •  921
    Belief reports and pragmatic intrusion: the case of null appositives.
    Journal of Pragmatics 40 2019-2040. 2008.
    In this paper, I explore Bach’s idea (Bach, 2000) that null appositives, intended as expanded qua-clauses, can resolve the puzzles of belief reports. These puzzles are crucial in understanding the semantics and pragmatics of belief reports and are presented in a section. I propose that Bach’s strategy is not only a way of dealing with puzzles, but also an ideal way of dealing with belief reports. I argue that even simple unproblematic cases of belief reports are cases of pragmatic intrusion, inv…Read more