Locutionary, Illocutionary, and Perlocutionary
Locutionary, Illocutionary, and Perlocutionary
On any occasion, the action performed by producing an utterance will consist
of three related acts. It is locutionary act, illocutionary act, and perlocutionary act
(Yule, 1996:48). Some utterances have three layers of interpretation, locution,
illocution, and perlocution (Wagiman, 2008:69). According to Austin (1967:109) he
divided speech act in to three types, first distinguished a group of things we do in
saying something, which together we summed up by saying we perform a
locutionary acts, which is roughly equivalent to uttering a certain sentence with a
certain sense and reference, which again is roughly equivalent to „meaning‟ in the
traditional sense. Second, we said that we also perform illocutionary acts such as
informing, ordering, warning, undertaking, utterances which have a certain
(conventional) force. Thirdly, we may also perform perlocutionary acts, what we
bring about or achieve by saying something, such as convincing, persuading,
deterring, and even say, surprising or misleading.
Based on the explanation above, in this research, the researcher will be
explain the types of speech acts, locutionary act, illocutionary act, and
perlocutionary act, however, it is only focus on illocutionary act.
a) Locutionary Act
Locutionary act is the basic act of utterance or producing a meaningful
expression. When someone produces the utterance, that utterance is called
locutionary act. For example someone said “it is rain outside!”, the utterance itself
“it is rain outside!” that called locutionary act. In the simple explanation,
locutionary act is the act of saying, the literal meaning of the utterance. Locutionary
act also can be called speaker‟s utterance. Locutionary act is the literal meaning of
the utterance, that is, the meaning of the utterance which is carried by the words in
the utterance and their arrangement or their structure of words (Wagiman, 2008:69).
When we have difficulty with actually forming the sounds and words to create a
meaningful utterance in a language, then we might fail to produces a locutionary act.
b) Illocutionary Act
Illocutionary act is performed via the communicative force of an utterance.
Illocutionary act is an utterance with some kind of function in mind. Someone might
utter to make a statement, an offer, an explanation, or for some other communicative
purpose. This is also generally known as the illocutionary force of the utterance
(Yule, 1996:48). This mean, in every utterance that we produced it is also another
act that performed inside the utterance. Illocutionary is the act of the utterance. It is
the act which is performed by saying the utterance. It is the underlying force of the
utterance or the interpretation of the utterance by the hearer (Wagiman, 2008:70).
Illocutionary act would include stating, promising, apologizing, threatening,
predicting, ordering and requesting. For example, “it is rain outside!”. That
utterance could be has meaning the speaker wish the hearer use umbrella if the
hearer want to go outside, or the speaker want the hearer not to go outside and stay
still in the room.
c) Perlocutionary Act
The last part of the speech act is perlocutionary act. Perlocutionary act is the
effect of the utterance on the hearer, depending on specific circumstances. This is
the effect on the hearer of what the speaker says. Perlocutionary act is the
consequent effect of the utterance on the hearer, or the overall aim of the utterance
(Wagiman, 2008:70). Perlocutionary act is the hearer‟s reaction toward the speaker‟s
utterance. Perlocutionary acts would include such effects as persuading,
embarrassing, intimidating, boring, irritating, or inspiring the hearer. For example,
“it is rain outside!”. The perlocutionary effect from that utterance may the hearer
use umbrella when he or she go to outside, or the hearer keep stay still in the room.
These are the simple example of the speech act with its component:
a) I have a substantial amount of back pay money
Locution (the utterance) : I have a substantial amount of back
pay money
Illocution (the meaning) : an act of offering the hearer to ask
for money, borrows some money,
or has a dinner treat, depending on
the context.
Perlocution (reaction) : the hearer asks for some money,
borrows some money, or asks for a
dinner treat.
b) You have eye inflammation
Locution (the utterance) : You have eye inflammation
Illocution (the meaning) : an act of ordering the hearer to
go to an ophthalmologist to have
eye examination or to treat the eye,
depending on the context.
Perlocution (reaction) : the hearer goes to an
ophthalmologist or treats the eye.
From the example above, the researcher wish it can give easier for the reader
in the understanding about speech act.
On any occasion, the action performed by producing an utterance will consist
of three related acts. It is locutionary act, illocutionary act, and perlocutionary act
(Yule, 1996:48). Some utterances have three layers of interpretation, locution,
illocution, and perlocution (Wagiman, 2008:69). According to Austin (1967:109) he
divided speech act in to three types, first distinguished a group of things we do in
saying something, which together we summed up by saying we perform a
locutionary acts, which is roughly equivalent to uttering a certain sentence with a
certain sense and reference, which again is roughly equivalent to „meaning‟ in the
traditional sense. Second, we said that we also perform illocutionary acts such as
informing, ordering, warning, undertaking, utterances which have a certain
(conventional) force. Thirdly, we may also perform perlocutionary acts, what we
bring about or achieve by saying something, such as convincing, persuading,
deterring, and even say, surprising or misleading.
Based on the explanation above, in this research, the researcher will be
explain the types of speech acts, locutionary act, illocutionary act, and
perlocutionary act, however, it is only focus on illocutionary act.
a) Locutionary Act
Locutionary act is the basic act of utterance or producing a meaningful
expression. When someone produces the utterance, that utterance is called
locutionary act. For example someone said “it is rain outside!”, the utterance itself
“it is rain outside!” that called locutionary act. In the simple explanation,
locutionary act is the act of saying, the literal meaning of the utterance. Locutionary
act also can be called speaker‟s utterance. Locutionary act is the literal meaning of
the utterance, that is, the meaning of the utterance which is carried by the words in
the utterance and their arrangement or their structure of words (Wagiman, 2008:69).
When we have difficulty with actually forming the sounds and words to create a
meaningful utterance in a language, then we might fail to produces a locutionary act.
b) Illocutionary Act
Illocutionary act is performed via the communicative force of an utterance.
Illocutionary act is an utterance with some kind of function in mind. Someone might
utter to make a statement, an offer, an explanation, or for some other communicative
purpose. This is also generally known as the illocutionary force of the utterance
(Yule, 1996:48). This mean, in every utterance that we produced it is also another
act that performed inside the utterance. Illocutionary is the act of the utterance. It is
the act which is performed by saying the utterance. It is the underlying force of the
utterance or the interpretation of the utterance by the hearer (Wagiman, 2008:70).
Illocutionary act would include stating, promising, apologizing, threatening,
predicting, ordering and requesting. For example, “it is rain outside!”. That
utterance could be has meaning the speaker wish the hearer use umbrella if the
hearer want to go outside, or the speaker want the hearer not to go outside and stay
still in the room.
c) Perlocutionary Act
The last part of the speech act is perlocutionary act. Perlocutionary act is the
effect of the utterance on the hearer, depending on specific circumstances. This is
the effect on the hearer of what the speaker says. Perlocutionary act is the
consequent effect of the utterance on the hearer, or the overall aim of the utterance
(Wagiman, 2008:70). Perlocutionary act is the hearer‟s reaction toward the speaker‟s
utterance. Perlocutionary acts would include such effects as persuading,
embarrassing, intimidating, boring, irritating, or inspiring the hearer. For example,
“it is rain outside!”. The perlocutionary effect from that utterance may the hearer
use umbrella when he or she go to outside, or the hearer keep stay still in the room.
These are the simple example of the speech act with its component:
a) I have a substantial amount of back pay money
Locution (the utterance) : I have a substantial amount of back
pay money
Illocution (the meaning) : an act of offering the hearer to ask
for money, borrows some money,
or has a dinner treat, depending on
the context.
Perlocution (reaction) : the hearer asks for some money,
borrows some money, or asks for a
dinner treat.
b) You have eye inflammation
Locution (the utterance) : You have eye inflammation
Illocution (the meaning) : an act of ordering the hearer to
go to an ophthalmologist to have
eye examination or to treat the eye,
depending on the context.
Perlocution (reaction) : the hearer goes to an
ophthalmologist or treats the eye.
From the example above, the researcher wish it can give easier for the reader
in the understanding about speech act.
13 comments:
good explanation :)
Best explanation I've read so far! Good job!
I love your explanation.
Thumbs up!!
Nice explanation
Good job, thanks
thank you !
Very nice explaination..its very simple ,its so easy to understand
That's good. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
It is a best extending of speech act ..
Best explanation so far !!
Simple, clear, to the point, and easy to undersrand. Tq
Thank you..
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