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1
The rhetoric of disparagement humor: An analysis of anti-semitic joking online
Weaver, S. - : De Gruyter, 2015
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2
An Equivocal Truth: An Analysis of Climate Change Communication in Respect to the Double Ethical Bind
In: Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection (2015)
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3
The rhetorical organization of horoscope written by English native speaker ...
Phuree Siriruttanaphon. - : Thammasat University, 2015
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4
Generic structure of research article abstracts in the field of business ...
Rungarun Srivichaimoon. - : Thammasat University, 2015
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5
Informing practice and sabotaging membership growth: an ideological rhetorical analysis of discursive materials from Kiwanis International
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6
Analysing the Performance of Economic Discourses
In: Conference papers (2015)
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7
Writing in the Disciplines: An Analysis of the Demands of College Writing Tasks
In: Georgia Educational Research Association Conference (2015)
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8
Business plan: A preliminary approach to an unknown genre
In: Ibérica, Vol 30, Pp 129-153 (2015) (2015)
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9
COMPARING HEDGES USED BY ENGLISH AND INDONESIAN SCHOLARS IN PUBLISHED RESEARCH ARTICLES: A CORPUS-BASED STUDY
In: TEFLIN Journal, Vol 26, Iss 2, Pp 209-227 (2015) (2015)
Abstract: The study examines whether English and Indonesian research articles written by their respective native speaker scholars are significantly different from each other in terms of the number of hedges used. Hedges are rhetorical features (e.g. may, perhaps, suggest) used to withhold complete commitment to the truth-value of propositions. The ultimate goal of the study is to examine whether Indonesian scholars need special instruction in hedging propositions. The assumption underlying the present study is that when they write in English, Indonesian scholars will deploy rhetorical features inherent in the Indonesian academic writing. Statistical analysis on 52 Applied Linguistics research articles (26 from each language) reveals that English research articles contain significantly more hedges than their Indonesian counterparts (Mann-Whitney U = 68.00, n1 = n2 = 26, p < 0.05, r = - 0.69), suggesting that Indonesian scholars are indeed in need of instruction that specifically focuses on hedging propositions in English.
Keyword: english research articles; hedges; indonesian research articles; Language and Literature; P; P1-1091; Philology. Linguistics; rhetorical need analysis
URL: https://doi.org/10.15639/teflinjournal.v26i2/209-227
https://doaj.org/article/346eb2344619489bab421867d51d6276
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