Published June 4, 2026 | Version v1

THE REALIZATION OF DIRECTIVE SPEECH ACTS THROUGH INTERROGATIVE FORMS IN JAPANESE BUSINESS DISCOURSE

  • 1. PhD, Associate Professor, Tashkent State University of Oriental Studies, Tashkent

Description

This article examines the linguopragmatic functions of directive speech acts realized through interrogative forms in Japanese business discourse. In commercial and professional communication, speakers frequently ask an addressee to perform a specific action, provide an answer, wait, call back, supply information, or clarify a deadline. In Japanese, such directive intentions are rarely realized through direct imperative structures; rather, they are conventionally encoded through fixed interrogative request formulas. Based on indirect interrogative constructions used in Japanese corporate interaction, the study identifies their key pragmatic functions: soliciting action, mitigating illocutionary force, maintaining business etiquette, and preserving the addressee’s negative face by leaving a formal possibility of refusal. The analysis demonstrates that interrogative forms in Japanese business discourse function not merely as instruments of information seeking but as highly conventionalized indirect directive devices.

Files

1021-1026.pdf

Files (580.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:228b6ec782f3ac635cd23c8f321ec461
580.3 kB Preview Download

Additional details

References

  • Achilova O.F. Functional Features of Action-Inducing Speech Acts in the Japanese Language. — Samarkand: Novateur Publication, 2025. — 138 p.