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Deutsche Sprechakttheorie Synonyme

Englische speech act theory Synonyme

speech  ESP  address  after-dinner speech  alliteration  allocution  allusion  anacoluthon  anadiplosis  analogy  anaphora  anastrophe  answer  answering  antiphrasis  antithesis  antonomasia  apophasis  aporia  aposiopesis  apostrophe  articulated  articulation  blast  bull session  catachresis  chalk talk  chiasmus  chinfest  choice of words  circumlocution  climax  commerce  communicating  communication  communicational  communion  communional  composition  confab  confabulation  congress  connection  contact  conversation  conversational  converse  conversion  correspondence  dealing  dealings  debate  declamation  dialect  dialogue  diatribe  diction  discourse  disquisition  duologue  ecphonesis  elocution  emphasis  enunciated  enunciation  eulogy  exchange  exclamation  exhortation  expression  filibuster  forensic  forensic address  formal speech  formulation  funeral oration  gemination  grammar  harangue  homily  hortatory address  hypallage  hyperbaton  hyperbole  idiom  inaugural  inaugural address  information  interacting  interaction  interactional  interactive  interchange  intercommunication  intercommunicational  intercommunicative  intercommunion  intercommunional  intercourse  interplay  interresponsive  interrogative  interrogatory  invective  inversion  irony  jargon  jeremiad  language  langue  lecture  line  lingo  lingua  lingual  linguistic  linguistic intercourse  litotes  locution  malapropism  meiosis  message  metaphor  metonymy  nuncupative  onomatopoeia  oral  oral communication  oration  oxymoron  palaver  paregmenon  parenthesis  parlance  parley  parol  parole  pep talk  periphrasis  peroration  personal usage  personification  philippic  phrase  phraseology  phrasing  pitch  pleonasm  prepared speech  prepared text  preterition  prolepsis  pronounced  public speech  question-and-answer session  questioning  reading  recital  recitation  regression  repetition  reply  response  responsive  rhetoric  said  sales pitch  sales talk    
speech organ  alveolar ridge  alveolus  apex  arytenoid cartilages  back  blade  dorsum  hard palate  larynx  lips  nasal cavity  oral cavity  palate  pharyngeal cavity  pharynx  soft palate  syrinx  teeth  teeth ridge  tip  tongue  velum  vocal chink  vocal cords  vocal folds  vocal processes  voice box  
speechless  anaudic  aphasic  aphonic  breathless  brief  brusque  close  close-tongued  closemouthed  concise  curt  dazed  dumb  dumbfounded  dumbstricken  dumbstruck  economical of words  inarticulate  indisposed to talk  laconic  mum  mute  nonplussed  quiet  reserved  shocked  short  silent  snug  sparing of words  stricken dumb  taciturn  terse  thunderstruck  tight-lipped  tongue-tied  tongueless  uncommunicative  unloquacious  untalkative  voiceless  word-bound  wordless  
speechmaker  debater  declaimer  demagogue  haranguer  jawsmith  panelist  public speaker  rabble-rouser  ranter  speaker  speecher  speechifier  spieler  spokesman  spokeswoman  spouter  talker  tub-thumper  

Sprechakttheorie Definition

By-speech
(n.) An incidental or casual speech, not directly relating to the point.
Speech
(n.) The faculty of uttering articulate sounds or words
Speech
(n.) he act of speaking
Speech
(n.) A particular language, as distinct from others
Speech
(n.) Talk
Speech
(n.) formal discourse in public
Speech
(n.) ny declaration of thoughts.
Speech
(v. i. & t.) To make a speech
Theory
(n.) A doctrine, or scheme of things, which terminates in speculation or contemplation, without a view to practice
Theory
(n.) An exposition of the general or abstract principles of any science
Theory
(n.) The science, as distinguished from the art
Theory
(n.) The philosophical explanation of phenomena, either physical or moral

speech act theory Bedeutung

speech therapy any therapy intended to correct a disorder of speech
visible speech spectrogram of speech, speech displayed spectrographically
speech intelligibility the intelligibility of speech (usually measured in the presence of noise or distortion)
freedom of speech a civil right guaranteed by the First Amendment to the US Constitution
speech organ
vocal organ
organ of speech
any of the organs involved in speech production
language
speech
the mental faculty or power of vocal communication, language sets homo sapiens apart from all other animals
speech perception the auditory perception (and comprehension) of speech
feature of speech
feature
(linguistics) a distinctive characteristic of a linguistic unit that serves to distinguish it from other units of the same kind
big-bang theory
big bang theory
(cosmology) the theory that the universe originated sometime betweenbillion andbillion years ago from the cataclysmic explosion of a small volume of matter at extremely high density and temperature
steady state theory
continuous creation theory
(cosmology) the theory that the universe maintains a constant average density with matter created to fill the void left by galaxies that are receding from each other, the steady state theory has been abandoned in favor of the big bang theory
hypothesis
possibility
theory
a tentative insight into the natural world, a concept that is not yet verified but that if true would explain certain facts or phenomena, a scientific hypothesis that survives experimental testing becomes a scientific theory, he proposed a fresh theory of alkalis that later was accepted in chemical practices
M-theory (particle physics) a theory that involves an eleven-dimensional universe in which the weak and strong forces and gravity are unified and to which all the string theories belong
string theory (particle physics) a theory that postulates that subatomic particles are one-dimensional strings
theory a belief that can guide behavior, the architect has a theory that more is less, they killed him on the theory that dead men tell no tales
theory a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world, an organized system of accepted knowledge that applies in a variety of circumstances to explain a specific set of phenomena, theories can incorporate facts and laws and tested hypotheses, true in fact and theory
theory of gravitation
theory of gravity
gravitational theory
Newton's theory of gravitation
(physics) the theory that any two particles of matter attract one another with a force directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them
preformation
theory of preformation
a theory (popular in the th century and now discredited) that an individual develops by simple enlargement of a tiny fully formed organism (a homunculus) that exists in the germ cell
scientific theory a theory that explains scientific observations, scientific theories must be falsifiable
field theory (physics) a theory that explains a physical phenomenon in terms of a field and the manner in which it interacts with matter or with other fields
economic theory (economics) a theory of commercial activities (such as the production and consumption of goods)
Malthusianism
Malthusian theory
Malthus' theory that population increase would outpace increases in the means of subsistence
communications
communication theory
the discipline that studies the principles of transmiting information and the methods by which it is delivered (as print or radio or television etc.), communications is his major field of study
set theory the branch of pure mathematics that deals with the nature and relations of sets
group theory the branch of mathematics dealing with groups
Galois theory group theory applied to the solution of algebraic equations
probability theory
theory of probability
the branch of applied mathematics that deals with probabilities
atomism
atomic theory
atomist theory
atomistic theory
(chemistry) any theory in which all matter is composed of tiny discrete finite indivisible indestructible particles, the ancient Greek philosophers Democritus and Epicurus held atomic theories of the universe
holism
holistic theory
the theory that the parts of any whole cannot exist and cannot be understood except in their relation to the whole, holism holds that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, holistic theory has been applied to ecology and language and mental states
atomic theory a theory of the structure of the atom
Bohr theory (physics) a theory of atomic structure that combined Rutherford's model with the quantum theory, electrons orbiting a nucleus can only be in certain stationary energy states and light is emitted when electrons jump from one energy state to another
cell theory
cell doctrine
(biology) the theory that cells form the fundamental structural and functional units of all living organisms, proposed in by Matthias Schleiden and by Theodor Schwann
wave theory
undulatory theory
wave theory of light
(physics) the theory that light is transmitted as waves
corpuscular theory
corpuscular theory of light
(physics) the theory that light is transmitted as a stream of particles
kinetic theory
kinetic theory of gases
(physics) a theory that gases consist of small particles in random motion
relativity
theory of relativity
relativity theory
Einstein's theory of relativity
(physics) the theory that space and time are relative concepts rather than absolute concepts
general relativity
general theory of relativity
general relativity theory
Einstein's general theory of relativity
a generalization of special relativity to include gravity (based on the principle of equivalence)
special relativity
special theory of relativity
special relativity theory
Einstein's special theory of relativity
a physical theory of relativity based on the assumption that the speed of light in a vacuum is a constant and the assumption that the laws of physics are invariant in all inertial systems
quantum theory (physics) a physical theory that certain properties occur only in discrete amounts (quanta)
kinetic theory of heat a theory that the temperature of a body increases when kinetic energy increases
germ theory (medicine) the theory that all contagious diseases are caused by microorganisms
information theory (computer science) a statistical theory dealing with the limits and efficiency of information processing
theory of dissociation
theory of electrolytic dissociation
Arrhenius theory of dissociation
(chemistry) theory that describes aqueous solutions in terms of acids (which dissociate to give hydrogen ions) and bases (which dissociate to give hydroxyl ions), the product of an acid and a base is a salt and water
theory of evolution
theory of organic evolution
evolutionism
(biology) a scientific theory of the origin of species of plants and animals
theory of indicators
Ostwald's theory of indicators
(chemistry) the theory that all indicators are either weak acids or weak bases in which the color of the ionized form is different from the color before dissociation
theory of inheritance (biology) a theory of how characteristics of one generation are derived from earlier generations
punctuated equilibrium
theory of punctuated equilibrium
a theory of evolution holding that evolutionary change in the fossil record came in fits and starts rather than in a steady process of slow change
quantum field theory the branch of quantum physics that is concerned with the theory of fields, it was motivated by the question of how an atom radiates light as its electrons jump from excited states
tectonics
plate tectonics
plate tectonic theory
the branch of geology studying the folding and faulting of the earth's crust
associationism
association theory
(psychology) a theory that association is the basic principle of mental activity
game theory
theory of games
(economics) a theory of competition stated in terms of gains and losses among opposing players
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Die Sprechakttheorien oder Sprechhandlungstheorien thematisieren als Teilbereiche der linguistischen Pragmatik sprachliche Äußerungen, z. B. Reden, die nicht nur Sachverhalte beschreiben und Behauptungen aufstellen, sondern zugleich selbst Handlungen vollziehen. Demnach sind Befehle, Namensgebungen, Eide, Versprechen, Warnungen, Beleidigungen u. Ã¤. aktive Veränderungen der Realität. Die vor allem in den 1950er und 60er Jahren auf der Grundlage dieser Theorie publizierten Abhandlungen analysieren und klassifizieren solche sprachlichen Handlungen und deren Implikationen. Zu den wichtigsten Vertretern zählen John Langshaw Austin und John Searle.