“Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging

This paper examines whether gender affects the use of Singlish interjections. Little is known about the way Singlish interjections are used, as most studies on gender and interjections are focused on the Western context. In addition, no study in Singapore has been conducted to examine this word c...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lai, Jamie Huiying
Other Authors: Stefanie Stadler
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76688
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-76688
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-766882019-12-10T11:04:05Z “Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging Lai, Jamie Huiying Stefanie Stadler School of Humanities DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics This paper examines whether gender affects the use of Singlish interjections. Little is known about the way Singlish interjections are used, as most studies on gender and interjections are focused on the Western context. In addition, no study in Singapore has been conducted to examine this word class from a sociolinguistic approach involving empirical evidence. As a starting point, this study aims to fill the research gap of Singlish interjections and gender by analyzing a corpus of first-hand text data to understand what interjections Singaporean undergraduates use and how they may vary between males and females. A total of 209 interjections were identified from 4652 lines of text message data. After the analysis of results, Singlish interjections can be classified into two main groups, taboo and non-taboo interjections. The frequency of interjections used by males and females showed no apparent difference. Taboo interjections in general were found to be inherently “male”, whereas few inherently “female” interjections were found in this corpus. Within same-gender conversations, the frequency of interjections was notably a lot higher than that of mixed-gender conversations. The findings from this present study are reflective of Singlish culture and reinforce the perception that males exhibit a higher level of expletion in their language. Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics and Multilingual Studies 2019-04-04T01:26:19Z 2019-04-04T01:26:19Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76688 en Nanyang Technological University 50 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Linguistics::Sociolinguistics
Lai, Jamie Huiying
“Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging
description This paper examines whether gender affects the use of Singlish interjections. Little is known about the way Singlish interjections are used, as most studies on gender and interjections are focused on the Western context. In addition, no study in Singapore has been conducted to examine this word class from a sociolinguistic approach involving empirical evidence. As a starting point, this study aims to fill the research gap of Singlish interjections and gender by analyzing a corpus of first-hand text data to understand what interjections Singaporean undergraduates use and how they may vary between males and females. A total of 209 interjections were identified from 4652 lines of text message data. After the analysis of results, Singlish interjections can be classified into two main groups, taboo and non-taboo interjections. The frequency of interjections used by males and females showed no apparent difference. Taboo interjections in general were found to be inherently “male”, whereas few inherently “female” interjections were found in this corpus. Within same-gender conversations, the frequency of interjections was notably a lot higher than that of mixed-gender conversations. The findings from this present study are reflective of Singlish culture and reinforce the perception that males exhibit a higher level of expletion in their language.
author2 Stefanie Stadler
author_facet Stefanie Stadler
Lai, Jamie Huiying
format Final Year Project
author Lai, Jamie Huiying
author_sort Lai, Jamie Huiying
title “Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging
title_short “Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging
title_full “Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging
title_fullStr “Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging
title_full_unstemmed “Aiyo! Why like that?” The case of gender and Singlish interjections in text messaging
title_sort “aiyo! why like that?” the case of gender and singlish interjections in text messaging
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76688
_version_ 1681042699254235136