sitelogo
 Home»English» A linguistic analysis of selected Nigerian appellate court judgements

A linguistic analysis of selected Nigerian appellate court judgements

 Department: English  
 By: usericon Ekings  

 Project ID: 7386
   Rating:  (5.0) votes: 1
Rate this project
   Price:₦5000
Abstract
The study adopted the propositional and meta-propositional frameworks to analyse six APCJs from the Nigerian Weekly Law Reports (1999-2004). Purposive random sampling technique was employed in selecting two leading Judgements from each of the stratified groupings of the three types of appellate judgements: murder cases, human rights abuses and property crimes. Out of the 1,129 sentences that form the data, 110 sentences were selected through the nth sampling technique of one of every sentence form the sample size. Using the Systemic Functional Grammar Theory, the tools of analysis employed were Pragmatic markers (pms), politeness theory, speech act theory and componential analysis, to discover their pragmatic marker types, the face types, lexical components, speech act types and their various implications. These analyses revealed that although ApCJs were linguistic, they were replete with meta-linguistic contents. Utterances in the texts comprised two distinct parts:  propositional contents (the basic messages) and meta-propositional contents (the linguistically encoded clues exploited by the judges in signalling their potential communicative intentions). The meta-propositional contents were signalled by four variants of pragmatic markers: basic, commentary, discourse, and parallel markers. The linguistic politeness findings revealed that ApCJ asymmetrically relate powers in disallowed appeals but symmetrically relate power in allowed appeals. The Componential analysis revealed that appellate judges achieved psychological plausibility of their stances through precise diction. The direct speech acts types were retrodictives, assertives, informatives direct requestives, performatives assertiveness and verdictives. These showed that the language of ApCJs functions directly for: reporting, asserting, informing, requesting and pronouncing verdicts, while it indirectly informs, asserts, concedes, directs, requests, dissents and ultimately judges. Thus, ApCJs themselves depend extensively on re-contextualized linguistic elements taken primarily from different texts, especially from the lower court judgements....
Preview +
Other English project topics and materials you might be interested in
»Factors affecting the choice of language in a multilingual society
»Stylistic analysis of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s half of a yellow sun
»Corruption and victimization in isidore okpewhotides and anthony abaghas children of oloibiri
»Political corruption and symbolism in Adichie Chimamanda Ngozi’s half of a yellow sun and Okey Ndibe’s arrows of rain
»The society and the girl child in the bluest eye by Toni Morrison and Kaine Agary's yellow yellow
»A stylistic analysis of selected short stories in jasper Onuekwusi's the triumphant return and Chimamanda Adichie's - A Thing Around Your Neck
»Struggle and survival in a cowrie of hope by Binwell Sinyangwe and the Cardinals by Bessie Head
»The language of the Christian religion: A comparative study of roman catholic church and some selected pentecostal denominations
»The post colonial experiences in warsan shire’s selected poems - ‘what we own’, ‘conversation about home (at the deportation centre)’ and ‘beauty’
»The effect of the Nigerian Pidgin English on the academic performance of university students in Nigeria - a case study of National Open University of Nigeria students in Benin study centre
»The misuse of the English articles in selected Nigerian newspapers
»Linguistic stylistic analysis of Toni Morrison Sula
»Feminism in African novels - a study of Amma Sarkos beyond the horizon and faceless
»Analysis of political corruption and underdevelopment in harvest of corruption by Frank Ogodo Ogbeche and naira has no gender by Olu Obafemi
»Thematic analysis of Besie Head's When Rain Clouds Gather

Upload Project

Do you have project materials to share? Upload and earn with it.

Departments