Abstract

Languages vary when it comes to linguistic manifestations of formal politeness, but what particularly marks professional email communication is the flexibility of the genre compared to traditional, formal business letters. This poses the question of how individual email writers navigate without clear standards and clearly prescribed formulae. This study focuses on the individual email writer and, specifically, opening salutations and closing valedictions in 927Norwegian workplace emails, followed by metapragmatic interviews with their senders. In an egalitarian society with few explicit linguistic manifestations of formal politeness, individual choices of formulations provide a rich source of data. Linguistic content analysis reveals a significant degree of consistency in each person’s individual use, which indicates that when there are no commonly held norms, people make their own rules. The interviewees are aware ofwhich openings and closings they prefer, but often not why. Further analysis of the data reveals that hierarchical social distance is not a motivational factor, but the intentions to be either personally close or professionally distant are. Both are regarded as viable options in formal workplace emails by their users. However, the informants’ perception of which linguistic items represent these motivations depends on individual preferences rather than on any establishedor institutionalised practises. The latter is not a uniquely Norwegian problem, but concerns email correspondents in general because of the flexibility innate to the email genre.

Highlights

  • This study focuses on openings1 and closings2 in professional email correspondence

  • What marks modern business-email communication is the flexibility of the genre compared to traditional, formal business letters (Darics 2015: 1)

  • The informants, who were shown by the content analysis to use mvh, considered this to be the immediate equivalent of med vennlig hilsen, a formal closing formula, and, the one best suited for a workplace email

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Summary

Introduction

This study focuses on openings and closings in professional email correspondence. Within pragmatics, the last decade has seen many studies of openings and closings in email correspondence between teachers and students (Bjørge 2007, Economidou-Kogetsidis 2011, Félix-Brasdefer 2012, Savić 2018). With a small number of emails per sender, these studies focus on the corpus rather than on the individual They are highly informative about the general use and nature of email greetings, but do not provide knowledge about the individual email correspondent’s preferences for a certain language use or how conscious those preferences are. What marks modern business-email communication is the flexibility of the genre compared to traditional, formal business letters (Darics 2015: 1) This poses the question of how individual email writers navigate without clear standards and clearly prescribed formulae. With an average of 60 emails per informant, the present study sets out to examine what considerations, if any, individual email writers have when they choose their opening salutations and closing valedictions in professional emails

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