This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by native speakers of Mandarin Chinese. Data were collected through a written production questionnaire comprising six situations. Results showed that learners and native speakers shared a preference for conventional indirectness. However, they favoured different strategy types in the realizations of requests. Moreover, native speakers tended to adjust their selection of request strategies according to social variables such as relative power, social distance, and rank of imposition, whereas learners displayed little sensitivity to social variables in the selection of request strategies. This study also provides some evidence of pragmatic developmen...
The use of specific speech acts have been found to vary with culture, thus to perform a spee...
The use of specific speech acts have been found to vary with culture, thus to perform a spee...
This is a case study about interlanguage pragmatic (ILP) development in speech acts of request based...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study aims to examine the differences of pragmatic strategies of requests made in Chinese by So...
The speech act of requesting has attracted a lot of attention in recent research. Previous studies ...
The speech act of requesting has attracted a lot of attention in recent research. Previous studies ...
This study examined the effects of different levels of linguistic proficiency on the development of ...
This study examined the effects of different levels of linguistic proficiency on the development of ...
The present study examined the differences between Mandarin Chinese and Australian English in email ...
Most interlanguage pragmatic studies in Thailand focus on learning/teaching English as a second/fore...
The field of interlanguage pragmatics has burgeoned since late 20th century. Requests, as a part of ...
The use of specific speech acts have been found to vary with culture, thus to perform a spee...
The use of specific speech acts have been found to vary with culture, thus to perform a spee...
This is a case study about interlanguage pragmatic (ILP) development in speech acts of request based...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study aims to examine the differences of pragmatic strategies of requests made in Chinese by So...
The speech act of requesting has attracted a lot of attention in recent research. Previous studies ...
The speech act of requesting has attracted a lot of attention in recent research. Previous studies ...
This study examined the effects of different levels of linguistic proficiency on the development of ...
This study examined the effects of different levels of linguistic proficiency on the development of ...
The present study examined the differences between Mandarin Chinese and Australian English in email ...
Most interlanguage pragmatic studies in Thailand focus on learning/teaching English as a second/fore...
The field of interlanguage pragmatics has burgeoned since late 20th century. Requests, as a part of ...
The use of specific speech acts have been found to vary with culture, thus to perform a spee...
The use of specific speech acts have been found to vary with culture, thus to perform a spee...
This is a case study about interlanguage pragmatic (ILP) development in speech acts of request based...