Apologies in New Zealand English
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Language in Society
- Vol. 19 (2) , 155-199
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0047404500014366
Abstract
The function of apologies is discussed within the context of a model of interaction with two intersecting dimensions – affective and referential meaning. Apologies are defined as primarily social acts conveying affective meaning. The syntactic, semantic, and sociolinguistic features of apologies are described, based on a corpus of 183 apologies. While apology exchanges divided equally between those which used a combination of strategies and those where a single strategy sufficed, almost all apology exchanges involved an explicit apology. An account is provided of the kinds of social relationships and the range of offenses which elicited apologies in this New Zealand corpus. Apologies are politeness strategies, and an attempt is made to relate the relative “weightiness” of the offense (assessed using the factors identified as significant in Brown and Levinson's model of politeness) to features of the apology strategies used to remedy it. Though some support is provided for Brown and Levinson's model, it is suggested that Wolf-son's “bulge” theory more adequately accounts for a number of patterns in the data. In particular, the functions of apologies between friends may be more complex than a simple linear model suggests. (Apologies, politeness, speech functions, New Zealand English, sociolinguistics, pragmatics)Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Introduction to Functional GrammarLanguage, 1995
- Politeness: Some Universals in Language Usage (Studies in Interactional Sociolinguistics 4)TESOL Quarterly, 1988
- Paying compliments: A sex-preferential politeness strategyJournal of Pragmatics, 1988
- Research Methodology and the Question of ValidityTESOL Quarterly, 1986
- Language Transfer in Language LearningThe Modern Language Journal, 1985
- Modifying illocutionary forceJournal of Pragmatics, 1984
- Language style as audience designLanguage in Society, 1984
- Excuse Me and I'm SorryTESOL Quarterly, 1978
- Introduction: Toward Ethnographies of Communication1American Anthropologist, 1964
- How to Do Things with WordsAnalysis, 1963