The English Language on Trial
Witnessing Disputed Meanings in American Courts
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:25th Jun '26
£32.00
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This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£105.00(9781009682787)

Drawing on the author's expert witness experience, this book analyzes disputed English meanings that led to US lawsuits.
Drawing on cases in American courts in which the author served as an expert, this book gives a linguistic analysis of disputed meanings in English at the basis of lawsuits. It is essential reading for researchers and students of semantics, pragmatics, philosophy of language, corpus linguistics, and language and law.Many lawsuits arise over disagreements about language and about the meanings of everyday words, phrases, and sentences. This book draws on over fifty cases involving disputed meanings in the American legal system where the author served as an expert witness or consultant, to explore the interaction between language and law. Stepping back from the legal specifics and their outcomes, it analyzes the disputes from the perspective of the language sciences, especially semantics and pragmatics, and language comprehension. It seeks to understand why, and in what areas of English grammar, lexis, and usage, they have arisen among speakers who do not normally miscommunicate and disagree like this. The cases involve contracts, patents, advertising, trademarks, libel, and defamation, and descriptive insights and methods from the language sciences are applied to each case to make explicit the meanings that speakers would normally assign to English.
ISBN: 9781009682824
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 418g
285 pages