Pragmatics is the study of inferred meaning. It is the social force words can take on - beyond their basic semantic value - when used in certain contexts.
It is a vital part of any A-level textual analysis as it is so very revealing of important linguistic aspects. If you ignore the pragmatic force of language in your analyses, you will lose many marks.
Semantics is sometimes said to be the study of sentence meaning; pragmatics to be the study of utterance meaning. This seems confusing - but think of sentence meaning as being that which a dictionary can reveal, whereasutterance meaning requires knowledge of the socialcontext of the whole communication - of the people involved, their social or professional relationship and of othersituational aspects pertaining to the time and place in which the words were used.
Pragmatics considers the 'force' language gathers when used in a particular socialcontext.
An example willmake this clearer. If you think about the phrase, 'Give him one!', the meaning this contains willvery much depend upon the socialsituation in which it is used. It is the noun 'one' that, in certain socialsituations, willcarry different levels of force: it is a pragmatically loaded word, where its precise meaning can only be inferredby the context of the language use.
Pragmatic meanings can be inferredin this way because, owing to the context of the language use, we are able to 'read into' a word the extra meaning - the utterance's pragmatic force - conferred on it by the way it is used within a particular socialsituation.
Pragmatics can allow language to be used in interesting and social ways: knowing that your listener or reader shares certain knowledge with you allows your conversation to be more personal, lively or less extended. It also allows you to use words and give them inferred elements such as power aspects, because your listener is aware of your socialstanding, for example. Similarly, language can act in ideological ways to reinforce a society's values - again, pragmatically. At another level, language users can rely on pragmatics to help them cut down on the number of words needed to make meaning clear - and hence contributes to a more lively style.
Here are a few examples thatrequiremore than a semantic analysis to reveal the intended meaning of the text's words and phrases, but where the pragmatic meaning is perfectly clear:
An important area of pragmatics is in the study of language and power. The implicit understanding of a power relationship between, say, two speakers, is often indicated by the meanings implied by the language used. This meaning can be verycontext dependent.