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Compliment responses in Hong Kong:An application of Leech’s Pragmatics of Politeness
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Book Review: Politeness in the History of English: From the Middle Ages to the Present Day
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Supporting the corpus-based study of Shakespeare’s language:Enhancing a corpus of the First Folio
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The metalinguistics of offence in (British) English:A corpus-based metapragmatic approach
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Communicative styles, rapport and student engagement:An online peer mentoring scheme
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The metalinguistics of offence in (British) English: a corpus-based metapragmatic approach
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Historical pragmatics and dialogue:Early Modern English negatives and beyond
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Taboo language and impoliteness
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Abstract:
This chapter focuses on the use of taboo language as—or, what is more often the case, as part of—a strategy to offend somebody or some group of people, that is, as part of impoliteness. Having briefly discussed the meanings of taboo language and impoliteness, the chapter commences with an examination of how taboo language figures in work on linguistic politeness and impoliteness. It considers its status as an impoliteness strategy, how taboo and impolite expressions come about, and the frequent role of taboo in calibrating the degree of offensiveness of an impoliteness strategy rather than constituting an impoliteness strategy per se. The chapter concludes with a brief case study involving the language of hate crime.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198808190.013.2 https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/134211/
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