The role of noun phrases in misunderstandings in Brunei English in ELF settings

Author:

Athirah Ishamina1,Deterding David1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei

Abstract

Abstract Innovative usage of noun phrases is among the most widely reported features of new varieties of English throughout the world and also in discourse in ELF settings, but its effect on intelligibility has not been extensively investigated. In an attempt to remedy this, ten conversations in English between Bruneians and people from elsewhere were recorded, and a total of 153 tokens were identified in which the non-Bruneians did not understand the Bruneian speakers. In twenty of these tokens, the grammar of a noun phrase may be one factor in giving rise to the misunderstanding, involving added or absent articles, innovative use of plurals, and the unexpected gender of a pronoun. Further analysis suggests that non-standard grammar was probably the main factor in just four of these tokens, two involving an added article before a proper noun, one with a spurious -s on the end of other, and one in which she was used to refer to a male. There were many instances of non-standard grammar in noun phrases throughout the conversations, but this rarely caused a problem, which suggests that the innovative structure of noun phrases seldom impacts on the intelligibility of Brunei English in ELF settings.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics

Reference36 articles.

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2. Cane, Graeme. 1996. Grammatical simplification and creativity in spoken Brunei English. In Peter W. Martin, Conrad Ożóg & Gloria Poedjosoedarmo (eds.), Language use & language change in Brunei Darussalam, 209–222. Athens, OH: Ohio University Center for International Studies.

3. Cogo, Alessia & Martin Dewey. 2006. Efficiency in ELF communication: From pragmatic motives to lexico-grammatical innovation. Nordic Journal of English Studies 5(2). 59–94.

4. Cogo, Alessia & Martin Dewey. 2012. Analysing English as a lingua franca: A corpus-driven investigation. London: Continuum.

5. Cruttenden, Alan. 2014. Gimson’s pronunciation of English, 8th edn. London: Routledge.

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