TIPE MOVE PADA GILIRAN PERTAMA PERCAKAPAN PADA BASA-BASI DALAM BAHASA INGGRIS AUSTRALIA DAN BAHASA INDONESIA

This research attempts to investigate how Australian and Indonesian strangers open a conversation with strangers by creating small talks. It aims to identify, classify, and make comparisons of the move types in opening turns of small talks between strangers in English, spoken by Australian, and in I...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: , ALFELIA NUGKY PERMATASARI, , Thomas Joko Priyo Sembodo, S. S., M. A.
Format: Theses and Dissertations NonPeerReviewed
Published: [Yogyakarta] : Universitas Gadjah Mada 2013
Subjects:
ETD
Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/121461/
http://etd.ugm.ac.id/index.php?mod=penelitian_detail&sub=PenelitianDetail&act=view&typ=html&buku_id=61548
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Institution: Universitas Gadjah Mada
Description
Summary:This research attempts to investigate how Australian and Indonesian strangers open a conversation with strangers by creating small talks. It aims to identify, classify, and make comparisons of the move types in opening turns of small talks between strangers in English, spoken by Australian, and in Indonesian, spoken by Indonesian. 629 moves appeared in the first turn from the DCT used as the data if this research. Those moves were then identified and classified by using Klaus P. Schneider�s move types classification in opening turns. The results of this research show that there are ten main move types spoken by two groups. In addition to the six move types by Schneider which are GREET, SELF-ID, REQID, SITU, QaU, COMP, there are also PERMIS, APO, GEN-IS, and ABO-ME. There are five other different move types which are coded as �other� since they appear only in one language. One of them is OTHER-INV from English small talks. The others are four move types produced by Indonesian small talks are OTHER-SWE, OTHER-OFF, OTHER-MET, and OTHER-REQ. The similarities of both small talks are: (1) both male and female respondents from Australian and Indonesian are likely to produce the same number of small talks