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Is Grice the greatest philosopher that ever lived?

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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Grice Abroad

For the Grice Club

Mikes writes in "How to become a Brit"

"Furriners should not regret, and recall that
they provide an endless source of mirth to
some Englishmen"

--- And he knew -- but that was before we's got swamped by them -- them Hungarians!

---

Anyway, Grice was perhaps right in restricting 'implicature' to "intended implicature".

"An implicatura," he writes, "is not like a baby. An unwanted baby is _still_ a baby; an unwanted implicature is not". He meant, not an implicature, no not a baby, which we know.

Thus, when travelling abroad, never mind. Never mind the implicature. People don't _KNOW_.

It's useless to _try_.


Just consider this random sample of signs from around the world. That is, English signs in foreign places. And why is it that the _wrong_ people travel? Now you know!

Cocktail lounge, Norway:
LADIES ARE REQUESTED NOT TO HAVE CHILDREN IN THE BAR.

At a Budapest zoo:
PLEASE DO NOT FEED THE ANIMALS. IF YOU HAVE ANY SUITABLE FOOD, GIVE IT TO THE GUARD ON DUTY.

Doctors office, Rome:
SPECIALIST IN WOMEN AND OTHER DISEASES.

Information booklet about using a hotel air conditioner, Japan:
COOLS AND HEATS: IF YOU WANT CONDITION OF WARM AIR IN YOUR
ROOM, PLEASE CONTROL YOURSELF.

Car rental brochure, Tokyo:
WHEN PASSENGER OF FOOT SIGHT, BLOW THE HORN, MELODIOUSLY AT FIRST,
BUT IF HE STILL OBSTACLES YOUR PASSAGE THEN BLOW HIM WITH VIGOUR.

In a Nairobi restaurant:
CUSTOMERS WHO FIND OUR WAITRESSES RUDE OUGHT TO SEE THE MANAGER.

On a River highway:
TAKE NOTICE: WHEN THIS SIGN IS UNDER WATER, THIS ROAD IS IMPASSABLE.

On a poster at Kencom:
ARE YOU AN ADULT THAT CANNOT READ? IF SO, WE CAN HELP.

In a City restaurant:
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK, AND WEEKENDS TOO.

In a maternity ward:
NO CHILDREN ALLOWED.

In a cemetery:
PERSONS ARE PROHIBITED FROM PICKING FLOWERS FROM ANY GRAVES BUT THEIR OWN .

Tokyo hotel's rules and regulations:
GUESTS ARE REQUESTED NOT TO SMOKE OR DO OTHER DISGUSTING BEHAVIOURS IN BED.

On the menu of a Swiss restaurant:
OUR WINES LEAVE YOU NOTHING TO HOPE FOR.

In a Tokyo bar:
SPECIAL COCKTAILS FOR THE LADIES WITH NUTS.

In a Bangkok temple:
IT IS FORBIDDEN TO ENTER A WOMAN EVEN A FOREIGNER IF DRESSED AS A MAN.

Hotel room notice, Thailand:
PLEASE DO NOT BRING SOLICITORS INTO YOUR ROOM.

Hotel brochure, Italy:
THIS HOTEL IS RENOWNED FOR ITS PEACE AND SOLITUDE. CROWDS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD FLOCK HERE TO ENJOY ITS SOLITUDE.

Hotel lobby, Bucharest:
THE LIFT IS BEING FIXED FOR THE NEXT DAY. DURING THAT TIME WE REGRET THAT YOU WILL BE UNBEARABLE.

Hotel elevator, Paris:
PLEASE LEAVE YOUR VALUES AT THE FRONT DESK.

Hotel, Japan:
YOU ARE INVITED TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE CHAMBERMAID.

In a Russian Orthodox monastery:
YOU ARE WELCOME TO VISIT THE CEMETERY WHERE FAMOUS RUSSIAN AND SOVIET COMPOSERS, ARTISTS, AND WRITERS ARE BURIED DAILY EXCEPT THURSDAY.

Supermarket, Hong Kong:
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, WE RECOMMEND COURTEOUS, EFFICIENT SELF-SERVICE.

From the "Soviet Weekly":
THERE WILL BE A MOSCOW EXHIBITION OF ARTS BY 15,000 SOVIET REPUBLIC PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS. THESE WERE EXECUTED OVER THE PAST TWO YEARS.

In an East African newspaper:
A NEW SWIMMING POOL IS RAPIDLY TAKING SHAPE SINCE THE CONTRACTORS HAVE THROWN IN THE BULK OF THEIR WORKERS.

Hotel, Zurich:
BECAUSE OF THE IMPROPRIETY OF ENTERTAINING GUESTS OF THE OPPOSITE SEX IN THE BEDROOM, IT IS SUGGESTED THAT THE LOBBY BE USED FOR THIS PURPOSE.

An advertisement by a Hong Kong dentist:
TEETH EXTRACTED BY THE LATEST METHODISTS.

A laundry in Rome:
LADIES, LEAVE YOUR CLOTHES HERE AND SPEND THE AFTERNOON HAVING A GOOD TIME.

Tourist agency, Czechoslovakia:
TAKE ONE OF OUR HORSE-DRIVEN CITY TOURS. WE GUARANTEE NO MISCARRIAGES.

The box of a clockwork toy made in Hong Kong:
GUARANTEED TO WORK THROUGHOUT ITS USEFUL LIFE.

In a Swiss mountain inn:
SPECIAL TODAY - NO ICE-CREAM.

Airline ticket office, Copenhagen:
WE TAKE YOUR BAGS AND SEND THEM IN ALL DIRECTIONS.

Etc.

As an exercise take your pick and analyse in some detail where the misimplicature lies.

2 comments:

  1. Now I am, thankyou!

    "The potential for unintended humor in “compressed” English isn’t restricted to headline writing; it goes back to the days of the telegraph."

    --- has a good Attalardian ring to it.

    Attalardo is my favourite Gricean authors in humor-theoretical stances. But more about him, later.

    -- Your thing, crash blosooms, should appeal McCreery whom we both know. He lives, after all, in Tokyo. The other day he was sharing with us,

    "Surely I wasn't outskirting a Buddah monk"

    --- Or something. He _sells_ word works!

    The Japan original 'crash blossom' is a good one. For I would distinguish between

    lifelong native humour

    and other

    -- the Japanese _are_ lifelong (Japanese) natives, so... But one doesn't know about that collocation. I failed to understand it, literally.

    The blossom of a crash, etc.

    Oddy, one of my first posts to FLN also implied or implicaed the Japanese. I was reading in The Guardian (sorry abhat that) that the Japanese refused to call a mouse (as per computer) a 'mouse' on the basis of it sounding "dirty".

    But I would thus distinguish between native (monolingual monocerebrial) speakers and other (eg. bis).

    I think it's _sad_ to have a monolingual gaffe like that. With lifelong natives (of other furrin languages) it's more OK.

    Etc.

    Humour can be a trick. I'm assuming all the listees in my list are apocryphal. Etc.

    The ones mentioned by the rather pedantic (but I love them) Language Log are too sophisticated to my taste, but should have a look.

    I don't think Grice really discussed this case of gross mistake that may originate a laugh, or a laughter, as the case may be.

    Attalardo did. He found that ALL humour, even slapstick one, as Chaplin falling over a banana skin, is some violation ('flouting' he writes) of a Gricean maxim.

    I once contacted him, a nice chap from Milano. I said, "I have to congratulate you on your having initiated that conference at Berkeley, the Legacy of Grice". He said, "That's because my name starts with an "A", unlike Zwicky's".

    Etc.

    ReplyDelete