Phraseology and Culture in English
Download 1.68 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Phraseology and Culture in English
8. Conclusion
Conventions do not come out of the blue. They evolve and become en- trenched within the discourse community because of their usefulness in solving recurrent problems (Clark 1996: 340). Over time, routine phrases may become more fixed as has been the case with phrases used in tele- phone conversations. However just as on the telephone there are competing strategies and routines. The medium and its institutionalisation also plays a role for what conventions develop. For example, it is important for the caller to identify himself when leaving a message so that the recipient can call back. The conventions emerging in the use of the answering machine may be familiar to varying degrees depending on how experienced people are in using the machine. Especially in the LLC material we find examples of strategies and routine phrases reflecting the participants’ uncertainty concerning appropriate strategies and their realisation as routine phrases. Just as in face-to-face conversation several factors play a role, for example who the participants are, the setting, the degree of politeness expected, constraints caused by how the participants conceptualise the situation, etc. Users may address an imagined recipient although no feedback can be ex- pected. When the medium was new it was natural to use strategies typical of face-to-face conversation and above all of telephone calls. Some strategies used on the telephone were bypassed from the start as inappropriate, for example asking about the recipient’s health, while other strategies such as greetings, questions and requests were adapted to the situation. The caller who uses strategies from telephone conversations uses clos- ings where the preclosing and the closing rituals occur together. New clos- ings, more appropriate to the medium, may involve a simple thank you where the function is not only to thank. However there is still an implicit thanking function, e.g. for being allowed to leave the message in the hope 346 Karin Aijmer that a response will be forthcomng from the owner of the machine. Other strategies such as closing off without indicating a termination seem to be disappearing because they have, presumably, proved to be less useful. Some strategies are the same on the telephone and on the answering ma- chine. For example, phrases such as ‘this is X’ which are used for self- identification are appropriate in both communication situations but could not be used in face-to-face conversation. A phrase such as ‘Looking for- ward to hearing from you’ however is now mainly associated with a letter writing frame. There is still competition between strategies and the routines which are used. Thank you (in that form) is more strongly linked to closings on the answering machine at least in institutionalised settings than good bye as shown by its frequency as a closing signal. Notes 1. For the transcription conventions used in the LLC, see Appendix. Both in the LLC and the Surrey material the names and telephone numbers have been re- placed. Download 1.68 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling