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I lost count of the scenes in which Gwen and Peter thrash out the question of whether they should be a couple, and there is a sigh of relief in the cinema when she, deploying what philosophers would call a performative utterance, says simply, "I break up with you," leaving us to wonder if she pulls the same trick in bed: "And now we approach the orgasm".
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Armour-Garb and Woodbridge say that what characterizes extrinsic pretense is that we could take the utterance made literally, whereas in cases of intrinsic pretense, "the pretense is integral to the utterance saying anything at all".
Table 2 Conventions used in the transcript Symbol Meaning Example # Bounds utterance said quickly #building up again causing the mountain to grow again# _ Underline for emphasis Seven : Stretched-out sound si de || Bounds overlapping talk V: |Wow| M: |Oh| no it was 10 actually Inaudible Untimeded brief pause (.4) Timed pause Comments or observations Ye(h)ah ((laughing)).
Under the patronage of Kalachuri King Bijjala II, whose prime minister was the well-known Kannada poet and social reformer Basavanna, a native form of poetic literature called Vachana literature (lit "utterance", "saying" or "sentence") proliferated.
A collection of thousands of utterances said to have been pronounced by the Prophet Muhammad, the Hadith is the main guide for Muslims in interpreting the Koran.
Justice Erlbaum, who allowed the testimony under a hearsay exemption for "excited utterances," said he gave them less weight because some statements were not recorded until weeks later.
Being Jewish, she was shocked at Hawks' casual anti-semitism (the slur "kike" featured in his every other utterance, she says), but put up with it because everything he did for her tended to make her richer, sexier and more famous.
Such an utterance is, says Blanshard, "as empty as the word 'Hurrah' would be when there was no enthusiasm behind it" (1949).
(274) 'Every utterance', Collingwood says, 'and every gesture that each one of us makes is a work of art.' (285) Collingwood next turns to 'practical' questions, of which we will consider two: the relation of art to artists, and relation between the artist and the community.
In his most famous utterance, he said that dancing "gives you nothing back, no manuscripts to store away, no paintings to show on walls and maybe hang in museums, no poems to be printed and sold, nothing but that single fleeting moment when you feel alive".
Alternatively, an utterance of (10) says of someone who is in fact a Socialist, and who therefore is not Chirac, that he could have been elected president in 2002.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com