Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
933169 Journal of Pragmatics 2011 23 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present study examines e-mail requests sent by Greek Cypriot university students (non-native speakers of English) to faculty at a major, English-medium university in Cyprus, over a period of several semesters. It examines forms of address (salutations), the degree of directness employed, and the degree and type of supportive moves and lexical/phrasal modifiers used by students in order to soften or aggravate their e-requests. Findings from the study have shown that the NNS students’ e-mails are characterized by significant directness (particularly in relation to requests for information), an absence of lexical/phrasal downgraders, an omission of greetings and closings and inappropriate or unacceptable forms of address. This paper argues that such e-mails can be perceived as impolite and discourteous and therefore capable of causing pragmatic failure. This is primarily due to the fact that they appear to give the faculty no choice in complying with the request and fail to acknowledge the imposition involved.

► The study examines e-mail requests sent by Greek Cypriot university students to faculty. ► Their e-mails are characterized by directness and lack of lexical/phrasal downgraders. ► There was an omission of greetings and closings and inappropriate or unacceptable forms of address. ► These e-mails can be perceived as status-incongruent and capable of causing pragmatic failure. ► They appear to give the faculty no choice and fail to acknowledge the imposition involved.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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