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Off-record indirectness in Jordanian Arabic

Authors
  • Al-Adaileh, Bilal A.
Type
Published Article
Journal
Journal of Politeness Research
Publisher
De Gruyter
Publication Date
Dec 07, 2023
Volume
20
Issue
2
Pages
507–531
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1515/pr-2022-0047
Source
De Gruyter
Keywords
License
Yellow

Abstract

This paper is an attempt to explore the realisation and motives of off-record indirectness as a common mode of conversation in naturally occurring social interactions in Jordanian Arabic. It is found that off-record indirectness mirrors speaker’s considerateness of the face wants of the speech act recipient, communicating face-threatening acts indirectly. The need to be polite justifies conversation partners’ deliberate flouting of Grice’s maxims and using conversational implicatures. Indirect means of communication and the employment of abbreviated conversations are also used for humour and as a preferred style and solidarity marker among family members, intimates and closely related people. It is also found that there are instances of off-record indirectness that might be perceived as impolite. In support of other scholars’ arguments, the study stresses that instances of off-record indirectness which might be perceived as impolite in terms of first-order politeness are doing interactional facework in terms of second-order politeness. Indirectness, then, may always be face work but is not always politeness.

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