Abstract
The mechanisms through which an indirect response to a question counts as a direct answer to that question can fruitfully be regarded as a process in which the listener supplies, constructs, infers, or is reminded of such statements as will (together with the indirect response itself) allow the inference of a plausible direct answer. This analysis presents seven rules of conversational interpretation, and likens conversational logic to the enthymeme. It also supports a widely asserted characteristic of conversation in general: that participants expect each other to cooperate in making utterances “make sense.” Copyright © 1976, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved
Cite
CITATION STYLE
NOFSINGER, R. E. (1976). ON ANSWERING QUESTIONS INDIRECTLY: SOME RULES IN THE GRAMMAR OF DOING CONVERSATION. Human Communication Research, 2(2), 172–181. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2958.1976.tb00709.x
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