Grace's Dialogue Implications: A Study of Selected Models from the Poetry of Muhammad bin Hazem Al-Bahily
Abstract
This research seeks to shed light on Paul Graces dialogue imperative within an applied reading of selected models from the poetry of Muhammad bin Hazem Al-Bahili. In connection with the sender and receiver, it is their responsibility to interpret the text and understand its intent This process comes to address the meaning, and Grace begins it by distinguishing between two meanings: the natural meaning and the abnormal (idiomatic) meaning. The essence of this matter is to clarify the nature of the use of language in real contexts, and this in turn places us in real contexts, which are not subject to positions or to semantic systems constantly, but rather their formal competencies stand incapable of interpreting it; Because it depends mainly on the speakers intent and intentions to influence the addressee, and on the addressees understanding of these intentions by building an acceptable logical inference, and on the context of the speech and the presumptions of conditions as well.