Abstract:
Complaints are bound to occur in our daily interactions while seeking a remedy to that
which has directly or indirectly affected someone unfavourably, thus, threatening the face
of the addressee and may eventually engender social relationship breakdown if not done
appropriately. However, that which is deemed appropriate is both language and culturally
specific. This study examined the complaint speech act produced by the Ghanaian learners
at the second-cycle institutions in the Ashanti region to ascertain the politeness strategies
invested in expressing their dissatisfaction with an unacceptable act in Ghanaian English.
The Brown and Levinson (1987) politeness theory served as the theoretical framework
used in the study. The qualitative design was adopted and data was elicited from ninety-six
(96) participants who were sampled using the purposive sampling technique from the three
senior high schools in Ashanti Mampong. The participants role-played four complaintprovoking
situations which focused on different power relations and social distance. The
data were transcribed and analysed thematically. The findings revealed eleven strategies
used in making a complaint in Ghanaian English, yet, the choice of a particular politeness
strategy depended on the sociological variables of power/status and social distance. The
findings further indicate that Ghanaians are indirect and tend to have a high inclination
toward positive politeness strategies as they try to reduce the effect of the face-threatening
act of complaining on the addressee‟s positive face. It was also found that this complaint
behaviour is influenced by the Ghanaian cultural norms of politeness.
Description:
A Thesis in the Department of Applied Linguistics, Faculty of Foreign Languages
Education, submitted to the School of
Graduate Studies in partial fulfilment
of the requirements for the award of the degree of
Master of Philosophy
(Applied Linguistics)
in the University of Education, Winneba
AUGUST, 2022