Affiliation:
1. Northern Arizona University
Abstract
Abstract
The study adopts a cross-register approach to style, examining style with relation to the situation of use. While
register tends to be avoided by style research as a confounding variable, this investigation of the styles of four American
presidents in memoirs, official letters, and public addresses illustrates that adding a register dimension leads to a more
accurate, nuanced analysis. The study identifies linguistic features associated with register vs. style variation in the corpus
and analyzes intraspeaker differences across registers with regard to the following functional categories: information density,
oral style, situation-dependent discourse, and narration vs. immediacy. The results indicate that even authors with a well-defined
individual style consistently adjust their language to the demands of the situation, with the most noticeable differences lying
between strictly regimented literate registers and the more oral, less conventionalized ones.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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