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Journal ArticleDOI

Too Many Words: Length of Utterance and Pragmatic Failure

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TLDR
This paper investigated the theoretical and applied domains of pragmatic failure and found that deviation from native norms of utterance length might be a potential cause for pragmatic failure in non-native speakers as compared to native speakers.
Abstract
This paper investigates the theoretical and applied domains of pragmatic failure. With respect to theory, it further clarifies pragmatic failure both in native and non-native speech, and with respect to the applied domain compares request realizations of native and non-native speakers in terms of length of utterance. In discussing the results of this comparison, a number of hypotheses are put forward concerning the ways in which deviation from native norms of utterance length might be a potential cause for pragmatic failure.The data were collected within the CCSARP (Cross-Cultural Speech Act Realization Pattern) project involving seven different languages and dialects (Blum-Kulka & Olshtain, 1984). The data were collected from both native and non-native speakers of each of the languages. The analysis of responses across several languages revealed a systematic difference in length of utterance used to realize speech acts by non-native speakers as compared to native speakers. The types of pragmatic failure that might be linked to being a non-native speaker are examined, thus continuing a line of research focusing on the pragmatic aspects of interlanguage (Blum-Kulka, 1982; Thomas, 1983; Edmondson et al., 1984).

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Research Methods in Interlanguage Pragmatics

TL;DR: This article reviewed the methods of data collection employed in 39 studies of interlanguage pragmatics, defined narrowly as the investigation of nonnative speakers' comprehension and production of speech acts, and the acquisition of L2-related speech act knowledge.
Journal ArticleDOI

Second Language Vocabulary Acquisition.

Susan M. Gass
TL;DR: The authors argue that most lexical studies are not centrally concerned with the establishment of a theory of the lexicon; rather, the majority deal with descriptive aspects of lexicon, and that it is no longer possible to say that lexicon is the "neglected component" of second language acquisition research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental Issues in Interlanguage Pragmatics

TL;DR: The authors reviewed existing studies with a focus on learning, examining research findings in interlanguage pragmatics that shed light on some basic questions in SLA, and exploring cognitive and social-psychological theories that might offer explanations of different aspects of pragmatic development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Communication Strategies in a Second Language: Definitions and Taxonomies

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the relevant literature from the last two decades, with particular consideration of the different ways in which CSs have been defined and of corresponding influences on the organization of strategy taxonomies, can be found in this article.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Logic and conversation

H. P. Grice
- 12 Dec 1975 - 
Book

Principles of pragmatics

TL;DR: In this article, Leech akan memaparkan pengertian pragmatik complementer dalam setiap kajian bahasa sebagai sebuah sistem komunikasi.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cross-Cultural Pragmatic Failure

TL;DR: The authors argued that pragmatic failure is an area of cross-cultural communication breakdown which has received very little attention from language teachers and argued that it is essential to avoid prescriptivism in this very sensitive area of language in use.
Book

Language and Communication

TL;DR: The authors provide a survey of major issues in the study of language and communication, and show how these are related to questions of practical concern in the learning and teaching of second and foreign languages.