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Hi, thanks, and goodbye: More routine information*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2008

Esther Blank Greif
Affiliation:
Boston University
Jean Berko Gleason
Affiliation:
Boston University

Abstract

This study examines children's acquisition of three politeness routines: hi, thanks, and goodbye. Twenty-two children, eleven boys and eleven girls, and their parents participated. At the end of a parent-child play session, an assistant entered the playroom with a gift to elicit routines from the children. Spontaneous production of the three routines was low, with thank you the most infrequent. Parents actively prompted their children to produce routines, however, and children usually complied. Further, parents themselves used the routines, with more mothers than fathers saying thank you and goodbye to the assistant. Results were discussed in relation to the role of parents in linguistic socialization and to the importance of routines in social interaction. (Routines; politeness formulas; linguistic socialization; parental teaching; mother-father differences; sex role socialization)

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

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References

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