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Has the Syntax of Advertising changed? A Syntactic Analysis of Slogans on the basis of Leech’s Concept of Standard Advertising Language

Title: Has the Syntax of Advertising changed? A Syntactic Analysis of Slogans on the basis of Leech’s Concept of Standard Advertising Language

Term Paper , 2014 , 21 Pages , Grade: 1,3

Autor:in: Marie-Kristin Hofmann (Author)

English Language and Literature Studies - Linguistics
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This paper investigates whether the syntactic features of current advertising slogans are still congruent with Leech’s concept of Standard Advertising Language (established in 1966) since it is a linguistic framework still widely accepted among scholars. But more importantly, because it can provide an answer to a more far-reaching question lying behind the issue of the applicability of Leech’s claims to advertising slogans today: in the course of almost half a century, has advertising language changed and does a new syntactic framework need to be established? The syntactic analysis is based on syntactic features such as sentence force, number of adjuncts, finiteness of verbs, tense and aspect, voice, type of co-ordination and number of adjectives. The findings suggest that the majority of the syntactic features of current advertising slogans are still congruent with Leech’s findings. As a result, the applicability of Standard Advertising English can be extended to current advertising slogans. However, certain deviations from Leech’s concept have been detected in the sample and they suggest a significant development: advertising slogans have changed in certain respects since the 1960s.

In Linguistics, four different types of sentence force can be distinguished, denoted as “mood” by Leech: declarative, imperative, interrogative and exclamative. The one occurring most frequently in Leech’s sample is the imperative force: in his sample, “…over one in four major independent clauses were imperative.” However, only very few imperative clauses are accompanied by a negative form since advertising aims at inciting actions instead of prohibiting them. The infrequency of negative forms, thus, represents a general principle of advertising language. Likewise, interrogative clauses are a common feature of advertising, but with only one in thirty major independent clauses being interrogative. As Leech does not mention declarative and exclamative clauses, they will not be treated as salient features of advertising language in this paper.

Excerpt


Inhaltsverzeichnis (Table of Contents)

  • Introduction
  • Establishing a Syntactic Framework
    • Sentence Force
    • Grammatical Simplicity
    • Verbal Groups
    • Nominal Groups
    • Coordination
  • Research part
    • Hypotheses
    • Methods and Material
    • Results
  • Discussion

Zielsetzung und Themenschwerpunkte (Objectives and Key Themes)

This term paper explores the syntactic features of advertising language, specifically of advertising slogans, and examines whether these features align with Leech's concept of Standard Advertising Language established in 1966. The paper aims to determine if the syntax of advertising has changed over time and if a new syntactic framework needs to be established.

  • Syntactic features of advertising slogans
  • Leech's concept of Standard Advertising Language
  • Changes in advertising syntax over time
  • Development of a new syntactic framework for advertising
  • Comparison of contemporary advertising language with historical data

Zusammenfassung der Kapitel (Chapter Summaries)

  • The introduction provides context by highlighting the history of advertising research and the importance of studying advertising language from a linguistic perspective. It introduces Leech's work as a pioneering study in this field and focuses on the syntactic analysis of advertising slogans.
  • Chapter 2 establishes a theoretical framework by outlining the syntactic features of advertising language that Leech considers typical. This chapter discusses sentence force, grammatical simplicity, verbal groups, nominal groups, and coordination.
  • Chapter 3 delves into the research process, presenting hypotheses about the composition of typical advertising slogans based on Leech's claims. It outlines the methods and materials used in the syntactic analysis of the advertising slogans in the sample.

Schlüsselwörter (Keywords)

Advertising language, Standard Advertising Language, syntactic analysis, advertising slogans, sentence force, grammatical simplicity, verbal groups, nominal groups, coordination, Leech.

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Details

Title
Has the Syntax of Advertising changed? A Syntactic Analysis of Slogans on the basis of Leech’s Concept of Standard Advertising Language
College
University of Mannheim  (Anglistische Linguistik (A1))
Grade
1,3
Author
Marie-Kristin Hofmann (Author)
Publication Year
2014
Pages
21
Catalog Number
V373247
ISBN (eBook)
9783668506534
ISBN (Book)
9783668506541
Language
English
Tags
syntax syntactic analysis advertising slogans language leech standard
Product Safety
GRIN Publishing GmbH
Quote paper
Marie-Kristin Hofmann (Author), 2014, Has the Syntax of Advertising changed? A Syntactic Analysis of Slogans on the basis of Leech’s Concept of Standard Advertising Language, Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/373247
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