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Verbal politeness and impoliteness in medical practitioners-patients communication in Swahili language: A case of Zanzibar hospitals

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dc.creator Ali, Juma Ali
dc.date 2019-08-17T07:43:39Z
dc.date 2019-08-17T07:43:39Z
dc.date 2015
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-20T13:54:33Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-20T13:54:33Z
dc.identifier Ali, J. A. (2015). Verbal politeness and impoliteness in medical practitioners-patients communication in Swahili language: A case of Zanzibar hospitals. Dodoma: The University of Dodoma.
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/688
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/688
dc.description Dissertation (MA Linguistics)
dc.description This study has investigated the verbal politeness and impoliteness in medical practitioners-patients communication in Swahili language. The study has applied qualitative approach based on descriptive analysis. Data were collected through non-participatory observation. It involved preliminary survey. Politeness and impoliteness have been studied as dichotomous aspects in medical practitioners-patients communication. Politeness is referred to how face-work attempts to establish, maintain and save face in communication (Brown and Levinson, 1987). Impoliteness is defined as communicative strategies designed to attack face, and thereby cause social conflict and disharmony (Culpeper, 2011). The verbal politeness and impoliteness strategies have been found to be applied by both medical practitioners and patients. It was revealed that the politeness existed through the following strategies; cooperation strategy, showing sympathy, concerned, seeking agreement and avoiding disagreement, intensifying interest to the addressee, euphemism, promise and asking for clarification. Impoliteness has been revealed through seeking disagreement, disassociate from the others, unconcerned and inappropriate joke. The above strategies were interpreted as polite and impolite through cooperative principle, relevance, using background knowledge, context and others.
dc.publisher The University of Dodoma
dc.subject Verbal politeness
dc.subject Verbal impoliteness
dc.subject Medical practitioner politeness
dc.subject Medical practitioner impoliteness
dc.subject Medical practitioner
dc.subject Medical practitioner language
dc.subject Medical practitioner communication
dc.subject Swahili
dc.title Verbal politeness and impoliteness in medical practitioners-patients communication in Swahili language: A case of Zanzibar hospitals
dc.type Dissertation


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