How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage

This study aims to investigate the choice of address terms by Malay women from different social status and discusses its sociolinguistic implications in the present society of Malaysia. It scrutinises the different patterns of address terms used by Malay women in addressing their spouses in three sp...

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Main Author: Mansor, Nor Shahila
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Chile 2019
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/89213/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/89213/1/WOMEN.pdf
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author Mansor, Nor Shahila
author_facet Mansor, Nor Shahila
author_sort Mansor, Nor Shahila
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study aims to investigate the choice of address terms by Malay women from different social status and discusses its sociolinguistic implications in the present society of Malaysia. It scrutinises the different patterns of address terms used by Malay women in addressing their spouses in three specific contexts; when they are alone, in the presence of others and in the formal settings namely workplaces and meetings. The study employs a descriptive qualitative research approach. However, there are some percentages used to support the findings. The choices of address forms were gathered through a social class questionnaire answered by 97 female participants stratified to upper-middle, middle and lower-middle classes. The findings suggest that among Malay women in the upper-middle class, the preferred address terms for their husbands is the English second person singular “you”. This choice is clearly influenced by the prestige received by the English language in Malaysia. The terms of endearment become the second opted terms of address in addressing the significant others among women in the upper-middle class. Meanwhile, the majority of the participants stratified in middle and lower-middle social classes revealed a preference for using kinship terms. Sociolinguistically, the kinship terms use among spouses in Malay culture flourish the intimacy, closeness and affection, and a high level of respect toward the addressee. The results of this study will redound to the benefit of linguistic communities in particular sociolinguists and Malay language learners by providing an understanding of the current trend in pronoun usage among women in the Malay culture.
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spelling upm-892132021-09-03T10:08:24Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/89213/ How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage Mansor, Nor Shahila This study aims to investigate the choice of address terms by Malay women from different social status and discusses its sociolinguistic implications in the present society of Malaysia. It scrutinises the different patterns of address terms used by Malay women in addressing their spouses in three specific contexts; when they are alone, in the presence of others and in the formal settings namely workplaces and meetings. The study employs a descriptive qualitative research approach. However, there are some percentages used to support the findings. The choices of address forms were gathered through a social class questionnaire answered by 97 female participants stratified to upper-middle, middle and lower-middle classes. The findings suggest that among Malay women in the upper-middle class, the preferred address terms for their husbands is the English second person singular “you”. This choice is clearly influenced by the prestige received by the English language in Malaysia. The terms of endearment become the second opted terms of address in addressing the significant others among women in the upper-middle class. Meanwhile, the majority of the participants stratified in middle and lower-middle social classes revealed a preference for using kinship terms. Sociolinguistically, the kinship terms use among spouses in Malay culture flourish the intimacy, closeness and affection, and a high level of respect toward the addressee. The results of this study will redound to the benefit of linguistic communities in particular sociolinguists and Malay language learners by providing an understanding of the current trend in pronoun usage among women in the Malay culture. Universidad de Chile 2019 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/89213/1/WOMEN.pdf Mansor, Nor Shahila (2019) How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage. Lenguas Modernas, 54. 49 - 62. ISSN 0719-5443 https://lenguasmodernas.uchile.cl/index.php/LM/article/view/56846
spellingShingle Mansor, Nor Shahila
How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage
title How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage
title_full How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage
title_fullStr How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage
title_full_unstemmed How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage
title_short How women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage
title_sort how women address their spouses: a current trend in pronoun usage
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/89213/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/89213/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/89213/1/WOMEN.pdf