from Part I - Concepts and Cultural Norms Underlying Speech Acts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 June 2019
Armostis and Terkourafi’s chapter focuses on aspects of politeness underrepresented in politeness research: prosody and the (competing) functions of borrowed and inherited linguistic items expressing politeness. Their first experiment looks at different phonological variants of thank you and the intonation patterns with which it is used, and establishes the contexts in which it is likely to be interpreted as a sincere form of thanking by speakers of Cypriot Greek. It shows that the decisive phonetic dimension is intonation; non-rising intonation is interpreted as sincere, especially in women’s speech. In the second experiment, participants listened to stimuli varying in choice of thanking item, intonation and address terms, and evaluated them on 14 dimensions expressing positive and negative attitudes. The results show that borrowed thank you is more likely to be evaluated as off-putting, curt, and arrogant than inherited efxariˈsto when used in high-imposition contexts, though the addition of address forms has a uniformly positive effect on both forms. The authors use these results to tease apart the effects of intonation and lexis on the evaluation of an utterance as im/polite.
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