Abstract

AbstractThis article addresses the relationship between linguistic politeness and addressee status in the performance of written requests in French. According to a first view, conventionalizedCan youfollowed by a verbal phrase (in short,Can you VP?) “indirect requests” (IRs) are preferred because they enable speakers to convey politeness effects absent in imperatives. According to an alternative view,Can you VP?is the standard polite request form in written communication because it avoids impoliteness implications. To test these two competing hypotheses, I carried out a production task experiment with 122 native speakers of Belgian French writing email requests. In this experiment, addressee status was manipulated. An important finding is that higher addressee status does not increase the frequency ofCan you VP?requests. Instead of usingCan you VP?more often when they address higher status people, the participants used specific politeness markers such as formal greetings and the V-form of address. These results disconfirm the hypothesis thatCan you VP?is used to convey extra politeness effects and suggests instead that people use such IRs to avoid the risk of being considered impolite.

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