Paraphrasing for Intent

When you paraphrase for intent, you look beyond what it said, and focus on WHY the person said it. This is by far the most difficult paraphrase to master. Recall that every message is goal driven – generally to inform, persuade, or entertain. When we paraphrase for intent, we look for that goal. In other words, what does the speaker want us to do with this information?  So, for example, if I said “I just hate taking out the garbage!” you may find an intent “I’m hearing you say that you would like me to take out the garbage. Is that correct?” Note the use of owned language and perception checking questions. I didn’t say I wanted you to take out the garbage, but when I complained about it, based on what I said and the nonverbal tone, and perhaps my body movements, you were able to deduce that perhaps I was trying to persuade you to do it. Take a look at the previous example:

Person A: I’m working late tonight.  I need the lawn mowed, the dishes done, and the living room vacuumed before our guests arrive.

Person B: If I’m understanding you correctly, you are wanting me to help you with these tasks?  Is that right?

Note the use of owned language (“If I’m understanding you correctly”) and perception checking question (“Is that right?”)

 

Lawn Mower image image

 

Paraphrasing for Tone

When you paraphrase for tone, you look at the emotion behind what someone is saying. This can be found through their words as well as their nonverbals such as tone of voice. But try not to associate Tone with just “tone” of voice. Take into consideration the whole message, verbal and nonverbal. To use the example above, if I said “I just hate taking out the garbage!” your tone paraphrase could be “It sounds to me like you are angry about having to take out the garbage. Is that correct?” Let’s look a the previous example:

Person A: I’m working late tonight.  I need the lawn mowed, the dishes done, and the living room vacuumed before our guests arrive.

Person B: It sounds to me like you are stressed about this.  Is that how you are feeling?

Note the owned language (“It sounds to me”) and the Perception-checking question (“Is that how you are feeling?”)

Putting it all Together

A complete paraphrase will contain a paraphrase for content, intent, and tone. You can do this all together or as 3 separate paraphrases. Let’s look at a complete paraphrase for the previous example:

Person A: I’m working late tonight.  I need the lawn mowed, the dishes done, and the living room vacuumed before our guests arrive.  

Person B: It sounds to me like you are stressed about this and would like me to help mow the lawn, finish the dishes, and vaccuum before our guests arrive. Is that right?

Here we have owned language (“It sounds to me”), tone (“you are stressed), intent (“would like me to help”), and content (mow the lawn, finish the dishes, and vacuum before our guests arrive.”), and a perception checking question (“is that right?”).

The activity below will allow you to practice identifying content, intent, and tone paraphrases: