TY - JOUR ID - 12916 TI - Requestive Speech Acts Realization Patterns: Observation from Persian JO - Journal of Research in Applied Linguistics JA - RALS LA - en SN - 2345-3303 AU - Kalantari Khandani, Ezatollah AD - Farhangian University of Kerman, PhD candidate at Zahedan Azad Universiy Y1 - 2017 PY - 2017 VL - 8 IS - Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Language, Discourse and Pragmatics SP - 104 EP - 124 KW - Pragmatics KW - Speech Acts KW - Direct and Indirect Request Strategy KW - Politeness Theory DO - 10.22055/rals.2017.12916 N2 - Without knowing the speech act functions, it would be difficult to make correct requests in a language. Studies in pragmalinguistics have shown that conventionally direct and indirect requestive patterns are perceived differently in different speech communities. This study investigates the perception of the requestive speech acts by Persian native speakers to determine the socially appropriate requestive patterns in Persian. It also examines whether there is any relationship between the use of the requestive patterns and contextual factors, namely relative power, distance, and rank of imposition. To these ends a total of 24 situations designed in the form of a questionnaire were used for written elicitation. The results show that Persian native speakers consider direct request strategy when accompanied with modifiers as an appropriate norm of making request in situations where interlocutors are socially intimate and where the speaker is more powerful than the hearer. On the basis of the results of the study, examining and investigating the notions of directness and appropriateness should be based on cultural norms and expectations as well as rational linguistic behavior. UR - https://rals.scu.ac.ir/article_12916.html L1 - https://rals.scu.ac.ir/article_12916_da25047a6835be0e4d8f28fca5429b64.pdf ER -