asidesemantika
Asidesemantika refers to a concept within linguistics and philosophy of language that explores meaning in contexts where explicit semantic information is absent or incomplete. It suggests that understanding can arise not solely from the dictionary definitions of words or the grammatical structure of a sentence, but also from pragmatic cues, shared background knowledge, and the implied intentions of the speaker. This is distinct from traditional semantics, which focuses on the literal meaning of linguistic expressions.
The term implies that meaning is not always fully "said" but is often "hinted at" or "assumed."
Asidesemantika draws upon theories of pragmatics, such as Grice's Cooperative Principle and implicature, which explain how