THE WORD ORDER IN THE ORAL COMMUNICATION ACT

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.69691/m3w03321

Keywords:

speaker, speech, communication, content, ellipsis, substitution.

Abstract

The current research paper deals with the nature of word order in conversational language. It focuses readers’ attention the language phenomenon as ellipsis, cleft and substitution and their impact on the types and degrees of the expression of the thought, feeling and ideas in conversation process. The main issue of the article is importance of word order in the expression of speaker’s attitude towards the dictum in different types of speech acts

Author Biographies

  • Gulandam Saparbaeva

    Doctor of Philosophy in Philological Science, Docent of Urgench State University

  • Bonu Shamuratova

    Student of Urgench State University

References

M.A.K. Halliday. Introduction to Functional Grammar: 4th Edition revised by M.Christian, M. Matthiessen. Birmingham, U.K., 2014. – P. 276.

Searle, J. 1969. Speech Acts. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

Marslen-Wilson W. Sentence perception as an interactive parallel process. Science, 1975. – P. 226-228.

Osgood, C. 1971. Where do sentences come from? In Steinberg and Jakobovits, eds., Semantics, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

Saparbayeva G.M. Oral communication act and its lexical-grammatical feature. Abstract of PhD Dissertation, – Urgench: UrSU PO, 2021

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Published

2024-06-29

How to Cite

THE WORD ORDER IN THE ORAL COMMUNICATION ACT. (2024). Journal of Tamaddun Nuri, 6(57), 302-306. https://doi.org/10.69691/m3w03321