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Communication and Style Shift in Japanese

open access: yesCommunication and Style Shift in Japanese
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Style shifting in commercials

Journal of Pragmatics, 2008
Abstract This paper presents a quantitative analysis of style shifting in a corpus of Flemish radio and television commercials. Previous research draws attention to styling processes in advertising language, as discursive actions indexing social meanings.
Dirk Speelman
exaly   +2 more sources

Style-shifting in student–professor conversations

Journal of Pragmatics, 2016
Abstract This case study investigates style-shifting in female professor–student conversations for identity and stance from the perspective of constructivist discourse theory ( Ochs, 1993 , Ochs, 1996 ). Three sets of conversations in informal settings were examined.
Kyoko Masuda
exaly   +2 more sources

Levels of style-shifting

Journal of Pragmatics, 1985
exaly   +2 more sources

Style Shift in Korean Teledramas

FORUM. Revue internationale d’interprétation et de traduction / International Journal of Interpretation and Translation, 2009
La pragmatique de la communication interpersonnelle a été sous représentée dans le domaine de la recherche en traduction audiovisuelle (Mason, 1989). Cette lacune en recherche est regrettable si l'on considère des langues telles que le coréen, dans lesquelles les notions telles que la familiarité et le statut accueillent obligatoirement une ...
Jeansue Mueller, Charles M. Mueller
openaire   +1 more source

Style, identity and language shift

Language Ecology, 2020
AbstractThis study is an examination of style-shifting in the speech of a single interviewer conducting sociolinguistic interviews in Garifuna (Arawak), an endangered language spoken in Belize and along the eastern coast of Central America. It provides a case study of intraspeaker variation in the context of language shift, exploring how the models and
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The perceptual consequences of style shifting

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2023
We focus on the perception of changes in production made by self-identified bidialectal Southern (SUSE) and Mainstream (MUSE) US English speakers, who were recorded reading words in both dialects. Acoustical analysis shows quantifiable changes across the two guises, but that speakers' MUSE guises still looks more Southern than monolingual speakers of ...
openaire   +1 more source

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