In:Intercultural Perspectives on Research Writing
Edited by Pilar Mur-Dueñas and Jolanta Šinkūnienė
[AILA Applied Linguistics Series 18] 2018
► pp. 105–127
Chapter 5Asserting research status, values and relevance in thesis abstracts of Science and Engineering
Published online: 6 December 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/aals.18.05meh
https://doi.org/10.1075/aals.18.05meh
Abstract
This study examines the use of evaluation in thesis abstracts written by Malaysian novice research writers from Science
and Engineering fields. Different linguistic features performing three different functions of evaluation were
identified and categorised into status, value and relevance. Lexico-grammatical analysis has shown variations in terms
of the overall preferences for status over value and relevance in the two fields. Science writers were more inclined
to include status markers expressing certainty while summarising their research findings in the Product section of
abstracts whereas Engineering writers appeared less assertive. Results from this study offer L2 research writers
insights into specific linguistic choices to be made for writing efficient and persuasive research abstracts.
Article outline
- 1.Abstracts and promotional features
- 2.Theoretical orientation
- 3.Corpus description
- 4.Methodology
- 5.Findings
- Distribution of evaluation functions
- Evaluation functions per section in thesis abstract
- 6.Discussion and conclusion
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