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i.
Locutionary : It is the act of saying something (the locution) with a certain
meaning in the traditional sense. It has a non-ambiguous meaning and
reference. This is the basic literal, propositional or semantic of the utterance.
According to Austin (1962:121), a locutionary act contains “within it the
phonetic, the phatic and the rhetic acts”.
Phonetic acts are acts of
pronouncing sounds, phatic acts are acts of uttering words or sentences in
accordance with the phonological and syntactic
rules of the language to
which they belong, and rhetic acts are acts of uttering a sentence with sense
and more or less definite reference.
ii.
Illocutionary : The Illocutionary act is the act in saying against the act of
producing the locution. It represents the speaker’s intent.
The illocutionary
force is what an utterance counts for. Illocutionary acts are under the control
of the speaker.
iii.
Perlocutionary : The Perlocutionary act refers to what one does by making
an utterance or saying something.The speakers do not simply create an
utterance with a function without intending it to have an effect. In other
words, they seek to change the external world. Speech Acts have an effect
on
the feelings, thoughts or actions of either the speaker or the listener. It
may or may not be what the speaker wants to happen but it is nevertheless
caused by the locution. Perlocutionary acts are under the control of the
hearer.
Unlike locutionary acts, perlocutionary acts are external to the
performance.
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