STRATEGIC SPEECH ACTS IN TRANSACTIONAL DISCOURSES
Keywords:
Discourse; Speech Acts; Transactions; Buying and Selling; BargainingAbstract
This article is on market discourse and thus, it explicates a cross section of persuasive trader-customer
speech acts in the sales transaction, a genre of discourse in which pragmatic speech acts stand out clearly. Given
that the transacting partners opt to use Kiswahili exclusively in the course of their transaction, it can be argued
that indeed Kiswahili seems to occupy a central place in the socio-economic life of the business community.
In this respect, this researcher examines the transactional encounter in Kiswahili between the trader and the
customer as mutual beneficiaries of the transactional exchange. The central concern underpinning this article is
cooperation. The two discussants deliberately maintain and sustain the flow of the discourse by using specific
speech acts in Kiswahili to the extent that either party could go to any length to ensure that the discourse does
not break down. In case there is a possibility of the discourse breaking down, then the two parties work out
the repair strategy including using various speech acts pertaining to politeness, greeting, promising, warning,
informing and cooperating. At the same time, they blame and complain about each other in a collaborative
way. They therefore transact business by talking in such a way as to display their concern and involvement
in the personal life of the co-interlocutor. In an attempt to persuade the trader to sell the goods at a low price,
the customer uses expressions that invoke his inability to pay as much. In this case, he uses various speech
acts that arouse the concern, sympathy and generosity that duty requires people to show to each other. Trader
customer Kiswahili discourse has a distinct speech act sequence that sustains the flow of the sales transaction
that uses a complex transactional speech act in form of greetings, questions and declarations. This article
therefore examines the market discourse by explicating a cross section of persuasive speech acts, which the
two transacting partners use in the course of their interaction.
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