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Endophora information


Endophora refers to the phenomenon of expressions that derive their reference from something within the surrounding text (endophors).[1]

For example, in the sentences "I saw Sally yesterday. She was lying on the beach", "she" is an endophoric expression because it refers to something mentioned elsewhere in the text, i.e. "Sally".

By contrast, "She was lying on the beach," if it appeared by itself, contains an exophoric expression; "she" refers to something that is not present in the surrounding text, so there is not enough information given within the text to independently determine to whom "she" refers. It can refer to someone the speaker assumes his audience has prior knowledge of, or it can refer to a person he is showing to his listeners. Without further information, in other words, there is no way of knowing the exact meaning of an exophoric term.

Endophora can be broken into three subcategories: cataphora, anaphora and self-reference.

  1. ^ Gillon, Brendan. Grammatical Structure and its Interpretation: An Introduction to natural Language Semantics. MIT Press. Chapter 4.

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Endophora

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Endophora refers to the phenomenon of expressions that derive their reference from something within the surrounding text (endophors). For example, in...

Word Count : 243

Cataphora

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pronouns that reference it. Both cataphora and anaphora are types of endophora. Other examples of the same type of cataphora are: If you want some, here's...

Word Count : 533

Exophora

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something extratextual, i.e. not in the immediate text, and contrasts with endophora. Exophora can be deictic, in which special words or grammatical markings...

Word Count : 389

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