Different kinds of conversational perspective-taking

(from the book) Focuses on how speakers and hearers take each other's perspectives into account when formulating and interpreting messages, and on how they coordinate their conversational contributions to ensure that messages are mutually understood. The chapter also addresses the idea that communicators tailor their speech to their addressee's characteristics.

Previous
Previous

How addressees affect spatial perspective choice in dialogue

Next
Next

Conversational evidence for rethinking meaning