A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students

The research investigated the thanking/gratitude strategies of three distinct cultures; Hausa, Chinese and Arabic languages with the aim of finding out the different strategies used by them and how different they are in their use of such strategies. The study employs Cheng (2005) Taxonomy of gratitu...

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Main Authors: Isyaku, Hassan, Yuepeng, Ma, Mahdi, Qusay, Sarhan, Gassan, Salih, Nahid, Paramasivan, Shamala
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australian International Academic Centre 2016
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/54822/1/A%20Comparative%20Study%20of%20Cross-Cultural%20Gratitude%20Strategies%20among%20Hausa%2C%20the%20Case%20of%20Arab%20and%20Chinese%20Students.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/54822/
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
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spelling my.upm.eprints.548222018-04-04T08:29:00Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/54822/ A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students Isyaku, Hassan Yuepeng, Ma Mahdi, Qusay Sarhan, Gassan Salih, Nahid Paramasivan, Shamala The research investigated the thanking/gratitude strategies of three distinct cultures; Hausa, Chinese and Arabic languages with the aim of finding out the different strategies used by them and how different they are in their use of such strategies. The study employs Cheng (2005) Taxonomy of gratitude strategies in analyzing the data which was obtained from 15 participants among the Hausa, Chinese and Arabic students in UPM through the use of DCT (discourse completion Task) which were translated by the researchers into the three languages respectively before retranslated in to English language for analysis. The findings show a significant relationship in the use of “Simple Thanking strategy” among the three cultures as this strategy is utilized in 71.60% of the responses in the Hausa version of the DCT, 62% of the Arabian responses in the Arabic version of their DCT and 63.75% of the responses in the Chinese version of the DCT and were all found to be in the “thanking alone and thanking followed by the favor strategies” consistently. While the least used strategy is the “recognition of imposition” which was only realized by Arabian students and none was found among the Hausa and the Chinese students. Australian International Academic Centre 2016-12 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/54822/1/A%20Comparative%20Study%20of%20Cross-Cultural%20Gratitude%20Strategies%20among%20Hausa%2C%20the%20Case%20of%20Arab%20and%20Chinese%20Students.pdf Isyaku, Hassan and Yuepeng, Ma and Mahdi, Qusay and Sarhan, Gassan and Salih, Nahid and Paramasivan, Shamala (2016) A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students. Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 7 (6). pp. 137-156. ISSN 2203-4714 10.7575/aiac.alls.v.7n.6p.137
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description The research investigated the thanking/gratitude strategies of three distinct cultures; Hausa, Chinese and Arabic languages with the aim of finding out the different strategies used by them and how different they are in their use of such strategies. The study employs Cheng (2005) Taxonomy of gratitude strategies in analyzing the data which was obtained from 15 participants among the Hausa, Chinese and Arabic students in UPM through the use of DCT (discourse completion Task) which were translated by the researchers into the three languages respectively before retranslated in to English language for analysis. The findings show a significant relationship in the use of “Simple Thanking strategy” among the three cultures as this strategy is utilized in 71.60% of the responses in the Hausa version of the DCT, 62% of the Arabian responses in the Arabic version of their DCT and 63.75% of the responses in the Chinese version of the DCT and were all found to be in the “thanking alone and thanking followed by the favor strategies” consistently. While the least used strategy is the “recognition of imposition” which was only realized by Arabian students and none was found among the Hausa and the Chinese students.
format Article
author Isyaku, Hassan
Yuepeng, Ma
Mahdi, Qusay
Sarhan, Gassan
Salih, Nahid
Paramasivan, Shamala
spellingShingle Isyaku, Hassan
Yuepeng, Ma
Mahdi, Qusay
Sarhan, Gassan
Salih, Nahid
Paramasivan, Shamala
A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students
author_facet Isyaku, Hassan
Yuepeng, Ma
Mahdi, Qusay
Sarhan, Gassan
Salih, Nahid
Paramasivan, Shamala
author_sort Isyaku, Hassan
title A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students
title_short A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students
title_full A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students
title_fullStr A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among Hausa, the case of Arab and Chinese students
title_sort comparative study of cross-cultural gratitude strategies among hausa, the case of arab and chinese students
publisher Australian International Academic Centre
publishDate 2016
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/54822/1/A%20Comparative%20Study%20of%20Cross-Cultural%20Gratitude%20Strategies%20among%20Hausa%2C%20the%20Case%20of%20Arab%20and%20Chinese%20Students.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/54822/
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