Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Polite diminutives in Spanish
A matter of size?
-
Martha Mendoza
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. General overviews
- Civility and its discontents 23
- How and why honorifics can signify dignity and elegance 45
- Whither politeness 65
-
Part II. The theoretical perspective
- Yoroshiku onegaishimasu 87
- An argument for a frame-based approach to politeness 99
- The significance of ‘face’ and politeness in social interaction as revealed through Thai ‘face’ idioms 117
-
Part III. The descriptive perspective
- Face threatening acts, primary face threatening acts, and the management of discourse 129
- Politeness in Thai computer-mediated communication 145
- Polite diminutives in Spanish 163
- Indirectness as a politeness strategy of Thai speakers 175
-
Part IV. The comparative perspective
- Japanese honorifics as a marker of sociocultural identity 197
- Directness as a source of misunderstanding 217
- Forms of address in Irish and Swedish 235
- Women, men and polite requests 245
- Privacy 275
- Selection of linguistic forms for requests and offers 283
-
Part V. The historical perspective
- Japanese pronouns of address 301
- An aspect of the origins and development of linguistic politeness in Thai 315
- Index 337
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. General overviews
- Civility and its discontents 23
- How and why honorifics can signify dignity and elegance 45
- Whither politeness 65
-
Part II. The theoretical perspective
- Yoroshiku onegaishimasu 87
- An argument for a frame-based approach to politeness 99
- The significance of ‘face’ and politeness in social interaction as revealed through Thai ‘face’ idioms 117
-
Part III. The descriptive perspective
- Face threatening acts, primary face threatening acts, and the management of discourse 129
- Politeness in Thai computer-mediated communication 145
- Polite diminutives in Spanish 163
- Indirectness as a politeness strategy of Thai speakers 175
-
Part IV. The comparative perspective
- Japanese honorifics as a marker of sociocultural identity 197
- Directness as a source of misunderstanding 217
- Forms of address in Irish and Swedish 235
- Women, men and polite requests 245
- Privacy 275
- Selection of linguistic forms for requests and offers 283
-
Part V. The historical perspective
- Japanese pronouns of address 301
- An aspect of the origins and development of linguistic politeness in Thai 315
- Index 337