Dictionary Definition
politeness
Noun
1 a courteous manner that respects accepted
social usage [syn: niceness] [ant: impoliteness]
2 the act of showing regard for others [syn:
civility]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- The act of being polite
Translations
Synonyms
Extensive Definition
Politeness is best expressed as the practical
application of good manners or etiquette. It is a culturally
defined phenomenon, and what is considered polite in one culture can often be quite rude
or simply strange in another.
While the goal of politeness is to make all of
the parties relaxed and comfortable with one another, these
culturally defined standards at times may be manipulated to inflict
shame on a designated
party.
Sociolinguists Penelope Brown and Stephen
Levinson identified two kinds of politeness, deriving from
Erving
Goffman's concept of face:
- Negative politeness: Making a request less infringing, such as "If you don't mind..." or "If it isn't too much trouble..."; respects a person's right to act freely. In other words, deference. There is a greater use of indirect speech acts.
- Positive politeness: Seeks to establish a positive relationship
between parties; respects a person's need to be liked and
understood. Direct speech acts, swearing and flouting Grice's
maxims can be considered aspects of positive politeness
because:
- they show an awareness that the relationship is strong enough to cope with what would normally be considered impolite (in the popular understanding of the term);
- they articulate an awareness of the other person's values, which fulfils the person's desire to be accepted.
Some cultures seem to prefer one of these kinds
of politeness over the other. In this way politeness is
culturally-bound.
Techniques to show politeness
- Expressing uncertainty and ambiguity through hedging and indirectness.
- Polite lying
- Use of euphemism (which make use of ambiguity as well as connotation)
- Preferring tag
questions to direct statements, such as "You were at the store,
weren't you?
- modal tags request information of which the speaker is uncertain. "You didn't go to the store yet, did you?"
- affective
tags indicate concern for the listener. "You haven't been here
long, have you?"
- softeners reduce the force of what would be a brusque demand. "Hand me that thing, could you?"
- facilitative tags invite the addressee to comment on the request being made. "You can do that, can't you?"
Linguistic devices
Besides and additionally to the above, many languages have specific means to show politeness, deference, respect, or a recognition of the social status of the speaker and the hearer. There are two main ways in which a given language shows politeness: in its lexicon (for example, employing certain words in formal occasions, and colloquial forms in informal contexts), and in its morphology (for example, using special verb forms for polite discourse).Criticism of the theory
Brown and Levinson's theory of politeness has
been criticized as not being universally valid, by linguists
working with East-Asian languages, including Japanese. Matsumoto
(1988) and Ide (1989) claim that Brown and Levinson assume the
speaker's volitional use of language, which allows the speaker's
creative use of face-maintaining strategies toward the addressee.
In East Asian cultures like Japan, politeness is achieved not so
much on the basis of volition as on discernment (wakimae, finding
one's place), or prescribed social
norms. Wakimae is oriented towards the need for acknowledgment
of the positions or roles of all the participants as well as
adherence to formality norms appropriate to the particular
situation.
Japanese
is perhaps the most widely known example of a language that encodes
politeness at its very core. Japanese has two main levels of
politeness, one for intimate acquaintances, family and friends, and
one for other groups, and verb morphology reflects these levels.
Besides that, some verbs have special hyper-polite suppletive forms. This
happens also with some nouns and interrogative pronouns. Japanese
also employs different personal pronouns for each person according
to gender, age, rank, degree of acquaintance, and other cultural
factors. See
Honorific speech in Japanese, for further information.
References
- Beeching, K. (2002) Gender, Politeness and Pragmatic Particles in French. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
- Brown, P. and Levinson, S. (1987) Politeness: Some Universals in Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Ide, S. (1989) "Formal forms and discernment: two neglected aspects of universals of linguistic politeness". Multilingua 8(2/3): 223-248.
- Lakoff, R. (1975) Language and Woman’s Place. New York: Harper & Row.
- Matsumoto, Y. (1988) "Reexamination of the universality of Face: Politeness phenomena in Japanese". Journal of Pragmatics 12: 403-426.
- Watts, R. J. (2003) Politeness. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Jemmy, H. (2007) What is politeness? I've never heard of it before, can I put it in my mouth? Wigan: Pieperback Books.
See also
- Formality
- Politeness theory
- Leech's Politeness maxims
- Intercultural competence
- Niceties token - politeness rewards
External links
- Model Citizenship Real-life Examples of Civil Politeness
- Sociolinguistics: Politeness
- Sociolinguistics: Politeness in Spanish
- wiki project in comparative politeness: European Communicative Strategies (ECSTRA) (directed by Joachim Grzega)
politeness in German: Höflichkeit
politeness in Spanish: Cortesía
politeness in French: Politesse
politeness in Icelandic: Kurteisi
politeness in Dutch: Beleefdheid
politeness in Japanese: ポライトネス
politeness in Polish: Kurtuazja
politeness in Quechua: Allin simi
politeness in Russian: Вежливость
politeness in Ukrainian: Ввічливість
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
affability, agreeableness, amenities, amenity, civilities, civility, comity, complaisance, considerateness,
convention, courteousness, courtesy, courtliness, decencies, decorum, deference, diplomatic code,
elegance, elegancies, etiquette, exquisite manners,
formalities, good
form, good manners, gracefulness, graciousness, manners, mores, natural politeness, point
of etiquette, politesse, proprieties, protocol, punctilio, quiet good manners,
respect, respectfulness, rules of
conduct, social code, social conduct, social graces, social
procedures, social usage, solicitousness, solicitude, tact, tactfulness, thoughtfulness, urbanity