The meaning of a sentence is a layered structure (Hengeveld 1989) as shown in the following diagram:
Layers of sentential meanings
speech act |
typed proposition | illocutionary force |
bare proposition | basic illocution | |
situation | temporality | | |
participants | situation core | | | |
- By combining a set of participants with a situation core, a situation is constructed: .
- By fixing the temporal coordinates of a situation, a bare proposition is constructed: .
- By applying a basic illocution to a bare proposition, a typed proposition is constructed; it is an interrogative proposition in .
- By applying a specific illocutionary force to a typed proposition, an utterance is constructed; it is a question in .
. | your son met Mary yesterday |
. | whether your son met Mary yesterday |
. | Did your son meet Mary yesterday? |
If, in addition to step 2, the reference of the participants is fixed – ‘your son’ and ‘Mary’ in –, the bare proposition becomes a state of affairs.
Needless to say, is, first of all, a linguist's example sentence. Similarly as with the fixing of the coordinates in step 2, one has to imagine that it is an utterance made in a particular speech situation.