emitendist
Emitendist is a term used to describe adherents of emitendism, a hypothetical cognitive-linguistic doctrine that posits linguistic meaning primarily emerges from the act of emitting speech rather than from fixed lexical representations. The term combines emitere, to emit, with the agent suffix -ist. Proponents argue that meaning is constituted by the temporal dynamics of speech—prosody, rhythm, and audience response—and that interaction plays a central role in negotiating semantics. Emitendism stands in contrast to traditional lexicalist theories that treat words as stable symbols stored in the mind, instead viewing language as an emergent property of real-time communicative episodes.
History and scope: The concept was introduced in speculative linguistics in the early 2010s by researchers
Theoretical approach: Emitendists emphasize interaction, turn-taking, and signal alignment as constitutive of meaning. They argue that
Methods and practice: Studies typically analyze acoustic emission patterns—timing, intensity, pitch, and timing relative to conversational
Reception: The theory is debated; critics contend it risks under-specifying the role of stored linguistic knowledge