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utterancetype

Utterancetype is a term used in linguistics and natural language processing to denote the classification of an utterance by its functional type. The word blends “utterance” and “type” and is often employed informally to discuss how a sentence functions in communication. In many discussions, utterancetype aligns with traditional mood-based categories such as declarative, interrogative, imperative, and exclamative, though some authors treat it as a broader or more language-specific notion.

In descriptive linguistics, utterancetype serves as a label for annotating discourse or corpora, helping researchers analyze

Examples illustrate the common categories: “Close the door.” is an imperative utterancetype; “What time is it?”

Limitations and variations include cross-linguistic differences in how utterance type is marked and interpreted, and the

See also: Speech act, Dialog act, Illocutionary force, Utterance, Pragmatics, Prosody.

how
speakers
use
language
to
perform
actions,
state
information,
or
express
attitudes.
In
computational
contexts,
utterancetype
classification
supports
dialogue
management,
intent
recognition,
and
response
generation.
Systems
may
derive
utterancetype
from
cues
such
as
sentence
structure,
punctuation,
discourse
markers,
and
prosody
in
speech.
is
an
interrogative
utterancetype;
“It
is
raining.”
is
a
declarative
utterancetype;
“Amazing!”
is
an
exclamative
utterancetype.
However,
real-world
classification
can
be
more
nuanced,
as
many
languages
encode
illocutionary
force
through
morphology,
word
order,
particles,
or
prosody,
rather
than
fixed
sentence
types
alone.
tendency
for
prosody
and
context
to
shift
perceived
illocutionary
force
in
spoken
interaction.
Because
“utterancetype”
is
not
universally
standardized,
some
scholars
equate
it
with
speech
acts
or
dialog
acts
rather
than
a
separate
category.