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중국어 명령문의 공손화법 연구A Study on The Politeness of Chinese Imperative

Authors
윤상희
Issue Date
Aug-2019
Publisher
중국어문학연구회
Keywords
Imperative sentence; Politeness markers; Teaching Chinese; Pragmatics; Indirect commands
Citation
중국어문학논집, no.117, pp 191 - 212
Pages
22
Journal Title
중국어문학논집
Number
117
Start Page
191
End Page
212
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/44720
DOI
10.25021/JCLL.2019.8.117.191
ISSN
1225-973X
Abstract
An imperative sentence is generally written sentence form that command directing by superiors. when a lower person wants to make a request, he does not use the imperative sentence but an interrogative sentence or a declarative sentence to ask for, it becomes an appropriate expression for language etiquette from a pragmatic point of view. "把窗户打开! (Open the window)" can utilize that a direct command replace with the indirect command, the imperative sentence is used as a declarative sentence, an interrogative sentence, and an exclamatory sentence. The listener not only know the speaker's intentions through context, but also know the speaker's utterance meaning through sentences. The imperative sentences of Chinese can be expressed politely, either by sentence conversion or by the use of politeness markers. Long sentences, rather than short sentences, are much more polite in the way they are explained or asked. We analyze the statements based on the theories of speech act, divide them into indirect commands and direct commands, and observe the diversity of polite expressions by converting the sentences. There is a way to ask politely through various sentences and to use polite expressions in teaching Chinese.
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