Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials
This paper examines the use of the pragmatic particle xiao in the Singaporean context. Postulated to have originated from online Chinese discourse, xiao is used to alter the impact of utterances through the increment of vagueness in the propositions, adding ambiguity and signalling non-prototypical...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-731542019-12-10T11:53:11Z Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials Hong, Amanda Yu Hua Stefanie Stadler School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics::Pragmatics This paper examines the use of the pragmatic particle xiao in the Singaporean context. Postulated to have originated from online Chinese discourse, xiao is used to alter the impact of utterances through the increment of vagueness in the propositions, adding ambiguity and signalling non-prototypical representations of the concepts expressed, as a method of mitigation to achieve politeness goals. The particle is applied in local conversations in its Romanised form, and is primarily inserted into English-dominant utterances, though also occasionally paired with Mandarin and Singapore Colloquial English terms. The adoption of this form of use by local participants indicates the existence of several underlying motivations that are socially driven, and its proliferation may be reflective of user perceptions towards its effectiveness in conversation. Xiao is observed to serve three main social functions – a marker for solidarity, a mask for inadequacy in linguistic proficiency or knowledge about the subject matter, and a way to protect the face of interlocutors. Additional modifiers such as ‘really’ and ‘a bit’ were also observed before the xiao+predicate combination, an indicator of the plausible conceptualisation of xiao and its associated predicate, and the degree of internalisation of the use of xiao among local users. Bachelor of Arts 2018-01-08T05:42:45Z 2018-01-08T05:42:45Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73154 en Nanyang Technological University 68 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics::Pragmatics Hong, Amanda Yu Hua Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials |
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This paper examines the use of the pragmatic particle xiao in the Singaporean context. Postulated to have originated from online Chinese discourse, xiao is used to alter the impact of utterances through the increment of vagueness in the propositions, adding ambiguity and signalling non-prototypical representations of the concepts expressed, as a method of mitigation to achieve politeness goals. The particle is applied in local conversations in its Romanised form, and is primarily inserted into English-dominant utterances, though also occasionally paired with Mandarin and Singapore Colloquial English terms. The adoption of this form of use by local participants indicates the existence of several underlying motivations that are socially driven, and its proliferation may be reflective of user perceptions towards its effectiveness in conversation. Xiao is observed to serve three main social functions – a marker for solidarity, a mask for inadequacy in linguistic proficiency or knowledge about the subject matter, and a way to protect the face of interlocutors. Additional modifiers such as ‘really’ and ‘a bit’ were also observed before the xiao+predicate combination, an indicator of the plausible conceptualisation of xiao and its associated predicate, and the degree of internalisation of the use of xiao among local users. |
author2 |
Stefanie Stadler |
author_facet |
Stefanie Stadler Hong, Amanda Yu Hua |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Hong, Amanda Yu Hua |
author_sort |
Hong, Amanda Yu Hua |
title |
Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials |
title_short |
Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials |
title_full |
Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials |
title_fullStr |
Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials |
title_full_unstemmed |
Examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of Singapore millennials |
title_sort |
examining the usage of xiao and its role as vague language in the textual conversations of singapore millennials |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73154 |
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1681049881436749824 |