Publication | Closed Access
The influence of mode, sub‐mode, and speaker predilection on style
23
Citations
57
References
1974
Year
Second Language WritingEngineeringStyle MarkersModalityPragmatic AnalysisStylistic AnalysisRhetoricApplied LinguisticsGeneral ModesPhoneticsSpeaker DiarizationDiscourse AnalysisLanguage StudiesInteractional LinguisticsWriting StudiesSpeech AcousticPragmaticsEnglish WritingSpeech CommunicationEpistemic StanceInterpersonal PragmaticPhilosophy Of LanguageDiscourse StructureSpeaker PredilectionSpeech ProcessingRhetorical TheorySpeech PerceptionLinguistics
With four basic assumptions about the nature of style as orientation, this study focuses on six subjects across two general modes and six sub‐modes of discourse. After discussing “style markers” such as sentence length, word length, TTR, cloze scores, ratios related to extent of qualification, AVQ, PTQ, and psychogrammatical features across modes and sub‐modes, the study sketches a “stylistic profile” of the subjects including not only these style markers but editing behaviors as well. Although subjects appear to have been influenced by modal and sub‐modal dimensions of style, individual predilections appear also to have been heavily influenced by factors relating to “epistemic stance.”
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