Language
Identify any:
declarative sentences
anaphoric references
demonstrative spatial pronouns
evaluative adjectives and adverbs
verbs of perception and sensory experience
Anglo-French vocabulary
deixis
intensifiers
What do they add to the piece and what is their desired effect on the audience? (e.g. engaging readers, moving them emotionally,
surprising, attracting or entertaining them or creating authority or trust.)
Comment on the register of the piece. Is it formal or informal? How does this relate to the theme and purpose of the piece? (Hint:
examples are often shown through field-specific lexis.)
Identify any language techniques. (e.g. list of three, alliteration) What is the effect of them?
Examine the nouns within the piece. What types are they (proper, common, collective or abstract)? What does this add to the piece and what is the desired effect?
What person is the text written in (1st, 2nd or 3rd) and why?
Which tense is the text written in and why? How is this useful in terms of audience and purpose?
Can the piece be described as 'above the line' or 'below the line'? Give evidence to support your answer.
How do the verbs, nouns and adjectives chosen tell you about the subject being discussed?
Identify the different language levels used in the piece and comment on their effect. (formal, colloquial, descriptive, specific and non-verbal)
What
can be said about the form of the lexis in the text? (shape and sound)
Can you
identify any semantic fields within the text? Are there any examples of a particular
semantic field being used to describe another?
Can you
identify any ways in which the producer of the text has used sound
patterns for effect? (e.g. alliteration, assonance, rhyme, tone,
onomatopoeia, slang and taboo language)
Identify
the tenor of the discourse. How are the relationships being developed
throughout this discourse? (e.g. friendliness, objectivity and solidarity)
Are the power relationships present within the discourse symmetrical or
asymmetrical?