Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives
Recently, there has been renewed interest in the study of silence as a linguistic tool used by humans for communication purposes. Since the work of Nwoye (1985) on eloquent silence among the Igbo of Nigeria, little study has been conducted on the use of silence among other myriad Nigerian tr...
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American Research Institute for Policy Development
2017
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my.upm.eprints.629952018-09-28T10:27:07Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/62995/ Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives Ibrahim, Bashir Abdullah, Ain Nadzimah Rafik - Galea, Shameem Mohd Kasim, Zalina Recently, there has been renewed interest in the study of silence as a linguistic tool used by humans for communication purposes. Since the work of Nwoye (1985) on eloquent silence among the Igbo of Nigeria, little study has been conducted on the use of silence among other myriad Nigerian tribes. Yet, there has been a general claim that Africans use silence in formal and social situations more frequently than their European and North American counterparts. This study seeks to understand and explain rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages. Focus group discussions were held to elicit data from some undergraduate students of two public universities in Northern Nigeria involving speakers of Hausa/Fulani, Igala, Yoruba, Idoma, Igbo, Tiv,Meroeh, Lunguda, and Nupe. Two discussions were held with 300 level students of the Department of English, 400 level students of the Department of Physics and 300 level students of the Department of Biological Sciences. The discussion lasted about twenty minutes with each of the group.The results indicated that silence in conversation performs at both illocutionary and perlocutionary levels, having both negative and positive connotations depending on the context, situation, and the participants involved. The findings indicated that silence is ubiquitous in human communication repertoire, irrespective of culture. Intra-and intercultural variation, however, exist on the perception of various cultures around the world on the use of silence in conversation. American Research Institute for Policy Development 2017-06 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/62995/1/Rhetorical%20functions%20of%20silence%20among%20speakers%20of%20some%20Nigerian%20languages.pdf Ibrahim, Bashir and Abdullah, Ain Nadzimah and Rafik - Galea, Shameem and Mohd Kasim, Zalina (2017) Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives. International Journal of Linguistics and Communication, 5 (1). 56 - 63. ISSN 2372-479X; ESSN: 2372-4803 http://ijlcnet.com/journals/ijlc/Vol_5_No_1_June_2017/6.pdf 10.15640/ijlc.v5n1a6 |
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Recently, there has been renewed interest in the study of silence as a linguistic tool used by humans for communication purposes. Since the work of Nwoye (1985) on eloquent silence among the Igbo of Nigeria, little study has been conducted on the use of silence among other myriad Nigerian tribes. Yet, there has been a general claim that Africans use silence in formal and social situations more frequently than their European and North American counterparts. This study seeks to understand and explain rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages. Focus group discussions were held to elicit data from some undergraduate students of two public universities in Northern Nigeria involving speakers of Hausa/Fulani, Igala, Yoruba, Idoma, Igbo, Tiv,Meroeh, Lunguda, and Nupe. Two discussions were held with 300 level students of the Department of English, 400 level students of the Department of Physics and 300 level students of the Department of Biological Sciences. The discussion lasted about twenty minutes with each of the group.The results indicated that silence in conversation performs at both illocutionary and perlocutionary levels, having both negative and positive connotations depending on the context, situation, and the participants involved. The findings indicated that silence is ubiquitous in human communication repertoire, irrespective of culture. Intra-and intercultural variation, however, exist on the perception of various cultures around the world on the use of silence in conversation. |
format |
Article |
author |
Ibrahim, Bashir Abdullah, Ain Nadzimah Rafik - Galea, Shameem Mohd Kasim, Zalina |
spellingShingle |
Ibrahim, Bashir Abdullah, Ain Nadzimah Rafik - Galea, Shameem Mohd Kasim, Zalina Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives |
author_facet |
Ibrahim, Bashir Abdullah, Ain Nadzimah Rafik - Galea, Shameem Mohd Kasim, Zalina |
author_sort |
Ibrahim, Bashir |
title |
Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives |
title_short |
Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives |
title_full |
Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives |
title_fullStr |
Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives |
title_full_unstemmed |
Rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some Nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives |
title_sort |
rhetorical functions of silence among speakers of some nigerian languages: cultural and individual perspectives |
publisher |
American Research Institute for Policy Development |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/62995/1/Rhetorical%20functions%20of%20silence%20among%20speakers%20of%20some%20Nigerian%20languages.pdf http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/62995/ http://ijlcnet.com/journals/ijlc/Vol_5_No_1_June_2017/6.pdf |
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