Abstract
This study attempts to deduce the "pragmatic" linguistic awareness of Wittgenstein in particular, especially that his view of language in a way of philosophical, linguistic and communicative awareness is of great importance. His early and late theories, and the various aspects of his awareness and interests in them, according to the specific usage context. Proceeding from this central reference, we seek in this study to define the framework of the approach that we would like to crystallize between linguistics and philosophy, taking into account the impact of influence, influence and functional cross-fertilization in the conceptual and production apparatus of each. Contemporary analytic philosophy by giving language an effective role as a method that seeks to analyze various philosophical, linguistic and intellectual texts and issues, and linguistics as a critical turning point in contemporary studies in crystallizing communication and interaction through its basic structure based on various knowledge, including philosophy in particular, as a conceptual key to any possible linguistic and non-linguistic knowledge . Wittgenstein's analytical philosophy (ordinary language) represented the best title for this philosophical-linguistic overlap, and the reliance on the linguistic pronunciation as a single or prominent evidence that only reveals meaning through it, by virtue of the mediation of the tripartite relationship that exists between (text - use - understanding).