A Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion Articles

Pakistani English has been forming and developing norms different from standard British/American English. This study explores the use and patterns of conjunctive cohesion, as elaborated and categorized by Halliday and Hasan (1976) and revised by Halliday and Matthiessen (2013) in Pakistani and Brit...

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Main Authors: Maham Khalid, Humaira Irfan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of English, University of Chitral 2024-04-01
Series:University of Chitral Journal of Linguistics and Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jll.uoch.edu.pk/index.php/jll/article/view/267
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author Maham Khalid
Humaira Irfan
author_facet Maham Khalid
Humaira Irfan
author_sort Maham Khalid
collection DOAJ
description Pakistani English has been forming and developing norms different from standard British/American English. This study explores the use and patterns of conjunctive cohesion, as elaborated and categorized by Halliday and Hasan (1976) and revised by Halliday and Matthiessen (2013) in Pakistani and British Newspapers’ Opinion Articles from November 2023. Twenty-eight opinion articles from the Pakistani English newspaper ‘The Express Tribune (TET)’ and 25 from the British English newspaper ‘The Guardian (TG)’ were collected and saved into two separate text files for analysis. Frequencies of 80 conjunctions (which are categorized into three categories: elaboration, extension, and enhancement; and further into nine subcategories) were calculated by Anthony’s (2023) AntConc software (version 4.2.4). Pakistani data showed a higher frequency of Extending Conjunctions than British data. However, the use of both elaborating and enhancing conjunctions is higher in British writing than in Pakistani writing. The study revealed extending conjunctions (‘and,’ ‘but,’ ‘or’ being the top 3 in both data) as the most used items by Pakistani and British writers; results also suggested excessive use of ‘and’ among Pakistani writers. Yet when it comes to complex conjunction items, the cohesive choices of both Pakistani and native English writers show differences.
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spelling doaj.art-f74a71afcb8349d3aada67779c3674ab2024-10-28T22:46:29ZengDepartment of English, University of ChitralUniversity of Chitral Journal of Linguistics and Literature2617-36112663-15122024-04-018IA Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion ArticlesMaham Khalid0Humaira Irfan1Ph.D. English (Linguistics) Scholar, Division of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Education, LahoreAssociate Professor of English, Division of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Education, Lahore Pakistani English has been forming and developing norms different from standard British/American English. This study explores the use and patterns of conjunctive cohesion, as elaborated and categorized by Halliday and Hasan (1976) and revised by Halliday and Matthiessen (2013) in Pakistani and British Newspapers’ Opinion Articles from November 2023. Twenty-eight opinion articles from the Pakistani English newspaper ‘The Express Tribune (TET)’ and 25 from the British English newspaper ‘The Guardian (TG)’ were collected and saved into two separate text files for analysis. Frequencies of 80 conjunctions (which are categorized into three categories: elaboration, extension, and enhancement; and further into nine subcategories) were calculated by Anthony’s (2023) AntConc software (version 4.2.4). Pakistani data showed a higher frequency of Extending Conjunctions than British data. However, the use of both elaborating and enhancing conjunctions is higher in British writing than in Pakistani writing. The study revealed extending conjunctions (‘and,’ ‘but,’ ‘or’ being the top 3 in both data) as the most used items by Pakistani and British writers; results also suggested excessive use of ‘and’ among Pakistani writers. Yet when it comes to complex conjunction items, the cohesive choices of both Pakistani and native English writers show differences. https://jll.uoch.edu.pk/index.php/jll/article/view/267conjunctive cohesiongrammatical cohesionPakistani EnglishWorld Englishes
spellingShingle Maham Khalid
Humaira Irfan
A Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion Articles
University of Chitral Journal of Linguistics and Literature
conjunctive cohesion
grammatical cohesion
Pakistani English
World Englishes
title A Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion Articles
title_full A Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion Articles
title_fullStr A Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion Articles
title_full_unstemmed A Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion Articles
title_short A Comparison of Conjunctive Cohesion between Pakistani and British English Newspapers’ Opinion Articles
title_sort comparison of conjunctive cohesion between pakistani and british english newspapers opinion articles
topic conjunctive cohesion
grammatical cohesion
Pakistani English
World Englishes
url https://jll.uoch.edu.pk/index.php/jll/article/view/267
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