Politeness in EuropeLeo Hickey, Miranda Stewart Politeness as practised across 22 European societies, firmly set within critical debates developed since the 1980s, is here presented in ways related to concrete situations in which language-users interact with one another to achieve their goals. Areas covered include types of politeness, forms of address, negotiation and small-talk in various contexts. |
Contents
Eastern Europe | 2 |
Western Europe | 13 |
How to Buy Bread Politely | 29 |
Face Distance and Sincerity | 45 |
Johannes Kramer | 58 |
Politeness and Impoliteness | 82 |
Between Respect and Acceptance | 100 |
Miranda Stewart | 116 |
Evasion at All Costs | 189 |
A MatterofFact Style | 203 |
From Titlemania to Grammaticalised | 218 |
Uncertainty in a Changing Society | 234 |
Distance Levels of Expression | 247 |
Southern Europe | 263 |
A Coffee or a Small Coffee? | 277 |
The Art of Selfrepresentation in Requests | 292 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
address forms Anna Lindh behaviour Blum-Kulka British English Brown & Levinson Brown and Levinson's characterised communication context contrast corpus cross-cultural culture Cypriot Greek Czech Danish discourse Dutch English Estonian everyday Example exchange expressions face-threatening face-work feedback Finnish formal formulas French function German Greek greeting hearer hedging Herr honorific illocutionary force imperative implicature impolite indirectness interaction interlocutors interpersonal Irish Journal of Pragmatics Kasper Kerbrat-Orecchioni language learners of Spanish lexical linguistic politeness Luxemburg Luxemburgish Madame middle-class minimisation native speakers negative face negative politeness norms Norwegian Owe Hellberg panie personal pronouns phatic plural politeness markers politeness strategies positive face positive politeness power distance pronominal question reference relationship s'il vous plaƮt second person Sifianou situation snill social distance society Sociolinguistics solidarity Spanish speech acts Swedish Swiss Switzerland talk terms of address thanks third-person tion tourist translation tutor usage utterance verb versus Wallonia