Defining your P's and Q's: Describing and Prescribing Politeness in Dictionaries

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Dictionaries Pub Date : 2019-12-14 DOI:10.1353/dic.2019.0014
M. Murphy
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT:The politeness markers please, thank you, and sorry provide a raft of problems for lexicographical treatment. Grammatically, they fall between categories. As pragmatic elements, they defy easy definition, and variations in their usage are subtle. Few words are prescribed so vigorously as politeness markers ("always say please and thank you"), yet they do not fit the stereotype of a prescription, in that there is no proscription. This study investigates how please, thank you, thanks, and sorry are treated in thirteen monolingual dictionaries of English, finding variation in (a) the extent to which their interactional functions are covered, (b) the types of information contained in definitions, and (c) the (sometimes very subtle) ways in which information about the potential (im)polite effects of these words is communicated. Learner dictionaries generally provide more explicit information about the polysemy of these expressions, while traditional American lexicography provides much less useful information, in part because of a tendency to define interactional word senses using similar formulae to those for denotational senses. The best definition practice emphasizes the actions the words perform and the contexts in which the actions take place.
定义你的P和Q:在字典中描述和规定礼貌
摘要:“请”、“谢谢”、“对不起”等礼貌标记给词典编纂带来了诸多问题。从语法上讲,它们属于不同的类别。作为实用主义元素,它们很难被简单地定义,而且它们的用法变化也很微妙。很少有什么词像礼貌标记那样被严格规定(“总是说请和谢谢”),但它们并不符合规定的刻板印象,因为没有禁止。本研究调查了13本单语英语词典中“请”、“谢谢”、“谢谢”和“对不起”是如何被处理的,发现了以下方面的差异:(a)它们的互动功能涵盖的程度,(b)定义中包含的信息类型,以及(c)这些词的潜在(非)礼貌效果的信息传达方式(有时非常微妙)。学习型词典通常会提供更多关于这些表达的多义词的明确信息,而传统的美国词典编纂提供的有用信息要少得多,部分原因是人们倾向于使用与意指意义相似的公式来定义相互作用的词义。最佳定义实践强调单词执行的动作和动作发生的上下文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Dictionaries
Dictionaries Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
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