5.3. Presupposition
Presupposition means "what a speaker or writer adopts is genuine or identified
by an eavesdropper or reader" (Yule, 2017: 373). What the speaker conveys to
the listener and what the writer conveys to the reader. It also means something
that you think is correct and that you use as the beginning of an argument, even
if it has not been proven. The act of believing it is true. Through examining any
text, the reader will find many assumptions that lead him to understand what
perspectives the writer tends to show and these assumptions can be found in
different sentences (Palmer, 1985). I, as a reader, found many presuppositions
in the target text "Communicative Competence", and these presuppositions are
as follow:
From the first sentence, "
Concentration on grammatical competence only,
however, will not afford the learner with the capability to interpret or produce
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