The study at hands is a cross-cultural exploration of request strategies in Kuwaiti Arabic and British English dialects. A mixed method approach of a qualitative and quantitative analysis was used (i.e., a Discourse Completion Test (DCT) and semi-structured interviews). Data was collected from a total of five hundred participants, two hundred and fifty from each group. Sixty participants were chosen for the semi-structured interviews. The analysis of the collected data was based upon Brown and Levinson's (1987) social variables (e.g., power, distance, and ranking). Also, the data was analyzed following Blum-Kulka and Olshtain's (1984) Cross-Cultural Speech Act Realization Project (CCSARP). The results of the study revealed that Kuwaiti Arab...
Research shows an increasing interest in the area of cross-cultural pragmatics due to the existence ...
Problem Statement: There are few researches investigating pragmatic awareness of Turkish adult EFL l...
The present study investigates the request behaviour of Tunisian EFL learners (TEFLL). For this purp...
There has been considerable attention from the cross-cultural pragmatics literature towards the vari...
The study compares requests produced by Omani and American students. It examines the differences and...
This study is concerned with probing the realization patterns of requests in Syrian Arabic and Brit...
This is a socio-pragmatic investigation into polite request strategies made by Yemeni learners of En...
Cross-cultural studies of speech acts in different linguistic contexts might have interesting implic...
Requests are considered one of the most face threating acts as they threaten the face of the hearer....
Speech acts realization in everyday interaction is seen as an important field to explore the impact ...
The study is about the choice of request strategies used by second language speakers residing in the...
In the last two decades, many studies have been conducted to investigate speech act performance by n...
This study focused on the speech act of asking for a favor in Saudi Arabic due to the lack of studie...
This study aimed at exploring the linguistic mitigating devices of requests used by Saudi EFL learne...
In the last twenty years, studies on cross-cultural pragmatics in general and apology strategiesin s...
Research shows an increasing interest in the area of cross-cultural pragmatics due to the existence ...
Problem Statement: There are few researches investigating pragmatic awareness of Turkish adult EFL l...
The present study investigates the request behaviour of Tunisian EFL learners (TEFLL). For this purp...
There has been considerable attention from the cross-cultural pragmatics literature towards the vari...
The study compares requests produced by Omani and American students. It examines the differences and...
This study is concerned with probing the realization patterns of requests in Syrian Arabic and Brit...
This is a socio-pragmatic investigation into polite request strategies made by Yemeni learners of En...
Cross-cultural studies of speech acts in different linguistic contexts might have interesting implic...
Requests are considered one of the most face threating acts as they threaten the face of the hearer....
Speech acts realization in everyday interaction is seen as an important field to explore the impact ...
The study is about the choice of request strategies used by second language speakers residing in the...
In the last two decades, many studies have been conducted to investigate speech act performance by n...
This study focused on the speech act of asking for a favor in Saudi Arabic due to the lack of studie...
This study aimed at exploring the linguistic mitigating devices of requests used by Saudi EFL learne...
In the last twenty years, studies on cross-cultural pragmatics in general and apology strategiesin s...
Research shows an increasing interest in the area of cross-cultural pragmatics due to the existence ...
Problem Statement: There are few researches investigating pragmatic awareness of Turkish adult EFL l...
The present study investigates the request behaviour of Tunisian EFL learners (TEFLL). For this purp...