The Speech Acts of Thanking: Pragmatic Strategies Used Among Malay Generation Z

Author:

Yusof Maslida1,Baharudin Rusmadi2,Ja'afar Salinah3,Harun Karim4

Affiliation:

1. Pusat Pengajian Bahasa, Kesusasteraan dan Kebudayaan Melayu, FSSK, UKM

2. Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka

3. Akademi Pengajian Melayu, Universiti Malaya.

4. Fakulti Sains Sosial dan Kemanusiaan, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia

Abstract

Generation Z is a generation of technology. They are said to show very little verbal communication skills. They are relatively weak in terms of expression, verbal communication, confidence and interpersonal skills. Among the weaknesses that are commonly mentioned is that the younger generation find it quite "difficult" to express "thank you" in their daily life as it is not considered an important matter. Therefore, this paper aims to examine the strategy of thanking speech acts among the Malay Generation Z. The speech act of thanking expresses feelings of gratitude, appreciation and indebtedness for a gift, offer or help given by a person. This study employs a descriptive quantitative approach in the form of a Discourse Completion Task (DCT) questionnaire. In this approach, counts are performed to indicate which thanking strategies occur more in number and frequency. DCT contains five questions based on three different situations, namely receiving a gift, receiving help and receiving an award. These situations are also differentiated in terms of participant relationships based on social distance and social status. The questionnaire was distributed to 212 respondents representing Generation Z, namely Form 4 and Form 6 students as well as university students. Additionally, the data were analyzed based on a modified version of the classification of gratitude expressions by Cheng (2005), which comprised eight gratitude strategies. The study found that in displaying grateful actions, Generation Z more often used a direct or explicit strategy when using the words "thank you" or "thank you very much". The results also showed that Malay Generation Z is still aware and know how to perform acts of gratitude when faced with situations that require responses of gratitude.

Funder

Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia

Publisher

Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka

Subject

General Medicine

Reference29 articles.

1. Aijmer, K. (1996). Conversational routines in English: Convention and creativity (Vol. 175). Longman.

2. Austin, J.L. (1962). How to do things with words. Clarendon Press.

3. Atieh Farashaiyan & Tan Kim Hua. (2012). A cross-cultural comparative study of gratitude strategies between Iranian and Malaysian postgraduate students. Asian Social Science, 8(7), 139-148.

4. Cheng, S. W. (2005). An exploratory cross-sectional study of inter-language pragmatic development of expressions of gratitude by Chinese learners of English (Disertasi tidak diterbitkan). University of Iowa. http://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/104

5. Cheng, S.W. (2010). A Corpus-based approach to the study of speech act of thanking. Concentric: Studies in Linguistics, 36(2), 257-274.

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