@article{oai:glim-re.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000698, author = {岡田, 聡宏 and Okada, Toshihiro}, issue = {4}, journal = {学習院大学人文科学論集, Gakushuin University studies in humanities}, month = {Sep}, note = {application/pdf, Intonation is too important a subject to be left just to the students of intonation. It should be of great interest to those who study human communication and cognition. Even modern studies of intonation,  however, fail to give a satisfactory explanation based on apragmatic theory, of how intonationa! meanings are communicated. Pragmatists, on the other hand, tend to underestimate the role of intonation in communication. In this paper, I therefore attempt to elucidate the function of intonation by means of a theory of human communication, Relevance.   It is assumed that a variety of complex intonation patterns can be reduced to two basic pitch accents, FALL, and RISE. The advantage of my relevance-theoretic analysis is that it can deal with any intonation pattern with one and the same theory.   My main aim here is to justify the following claims and to show how intonation is used by the speaker and how it is interpreted by the hearer.}, pages = {63--82}, title = {関連性と英語イントネーション}, year = {1995}, yomi = {オカダ, トシヒロ} }