2012
DOI: 10.1017/s0009838812000286
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How to Say ‘Please’ in Classical Latin

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Cited by 17 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Firstly, detailed diachronic and synchronic descriptions of Greek and Latin forms of address (Dickey 1995;1996;2002;2004a;2004b;Brown 2003; have been offered, suggesting a relation between these usages and the relative social standings of the speakers in interaction. Secondly, behaviour in conversation rituals, e.g., greetings and farewells (Ferri 2008;Poccetti 2010) and the use of formulaic expressions such as 'yes', 'no', and 'please' (Krylová 2004;Ferri 2010;Dickey 2012) have been investigated, although in Latin only. Thirdly, some attention has been devoted to diachronic realizations of individual classes of speech acts, e.g., directives (Risselada 1993;Leiwo 2010;Denizot 2011), or individual types of face-threatening acts, e.g., insults (Lentini 2013).…”
Section: Politeness In Greek and Latin Literature: An Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firstly, detailed diachronic and synchronic descriptions of Greek and Latin forms of address (Dickey 1995;1996;2002;2004a;2004b;Brown 2003; have been offered, suggesting a relation between these usages and the relative social standings of the speakers in interaction. Secondly, behaviour in conversation rituals, e.g., greetings and farewells (Ferri 2008;Poccetti 2010) and the use of formulaic expressions such as 'yes', 'no', and 'please' (Krylová 2004;Ferri 2010;Dickey 2012) have been investigated, although in Latin only. Thirdly, some attention has been devoted to diachronic realizations of individual classes of speech acts, e.g., directives (Risselada 1993;Leiwo 2010;Denizot 2011), or individual types of face-threatening acts, e.g., insults (Lentini 2013).…”
Section: Politeness In Greek and Latin Literature: An Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, the formulation of speech acts will be investigated in relation to their position within an interaction (Section 5) as described by Conversational 1 Cabrillana (2016) combines pragmatics with a sociolinguistic approach to all directive subtypes in one comedy. For studies on Latin requests, see Dickey (2012Dickey ( , 2016. According to Unceta Gómez (2018: 13), the directive speech acts are a quintessence of face-threatening acts (see Section 3) and, hence, they are a core issue for the im/politeness studies also in Classical languages.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cabrillana (2016) combines pragmatics with a sociolinguistic approach to all directive subtypes in one comedy. For studies on Latin requests, seeDickey (2012. According to Unceta Gómez (2018: 13), the directive speech acts are a quintessence of face-threatening acts (see Section 3) and, hence, they are a core issue for the im/politeness studies also in Classical languages.-978-90-04-44026-5 Downloaded from Brill.com05/09/2021 06:12:49AM via free access…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%