The speech act of paying compliment (“you are looking good”) to someone is the attempt to establish the social relationship and ties solidarity between the communicators. In addition, it attributes credit to someone other than the speaker; usually the person addressed, for some “good” (possession, characteristic, skill, etc.) which is positively valued by the speaker and the hearer. Furthermore, the act of responding it is an interlocutor’s acceptance (“Thanks, Thank you”) and non-acceptance (“it is really quite old”) of the compliments. In conjunction with English teaching and learning process, the attempt to compliment and respond it can be used as a strategy to help the EFL learners able to open a conversation or a short talk with their ...
Abstract: This study aims to describe (1) the form of compliment strategies and complimen...
Abstract: This study aims to describe (1) the form of compliment strategies and complimen...
Compliment is one kind of speech act where the speaker expresses his/her feeling toward the hearer. ...
It is widely acknowledged that teaching and learning languages involves far more than targeting surf...
Giving and responding to a compliment is one the most frequently acts that happen in human life. It ...
Compliment defined as a form of appreciation, entertainment, manifesting of satisfaction, and the wa...
The significance of this argument is that, despite the existence of countless works on the theory of...
There are vivid differences among cultures in terms of social norms, cultural beliefs, pragmalinguis...
Complimenting is a typical speaking act and the method in which it is responded to can vary based on...
Recent research in sociolinguistics and second language acquisition has shown that non-native speake...
Abstract: This article is a study of compliment responses used by Indonesians learning English to re...
The present study investigates the speech act of compliments by Taiwanese EFL learners and British E...
As communicative competence becomes a central pedagogical objective, more studies on speech act, whi...
This qualitative research aims to find out the strategies used by students in giving and receiving c...
This article reports on a study that set out to investigate how Iranian EFL learners respond to comp...
Abstract: This study aims to describe (1) the form of compliment strategies and complimen...
Abstract: This study aims to describe (1) the form of compliment strategies and complimen...
Compliment is one kind of speech act where the speaker expresses his/her feeling toward the hearer. ...
It is widely acknowledged that teaching and learning languages involves far more than targeting surf...
Giving and responding to a compliment is one the most frequently acts that happen in human life. It ...
Compliment defined as a form of appreciation, entertainment, manifesting of satisfaction, and the wa...
The significance of this argument is that, despite the existence of countless works on the theory of...
There are vivid differences among cultures in terms of social norms, cultural beliefs, pragmalinguis...
Complimenting is a typical speaking act and the method in which it is responded to can vary based on...
Recent research in sociolinguistics and second language acquisition has shown that non-native speake...
Abstract: This article is a study of compliment responses used by Indonesians learning English to re...
The present study investigates the speech act of compliments by Taiwanese EFL learners and British E...
As communicative competence becomes a central pedagogical objective, more studies on speech act, whi...
This qualitative research aims to find out the strategies used by students in giving and receiving c...
This article reports on a study that set out to investigate how Iranian EFL learners respond to comp...
Abstract: This study aims to describe (1) the form of compliment strategies and complimen...
Abstract: This study aims to describe (1) the form of compliment strategies and complimen...
Compliment is one kind of speech act where the speaker expresses his/her feeling toward the hearer. ...