
Research Article
Illocutionary Acts Found In Indigenous Villagers’ Conversation
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.27-10-2023.2352803, author={Ni Wayan Kasni and I Wayan Budiarta and A.A. Gede Suarjaya}, title={Illocutionary Acts Found In Indigenous Villagers’ Conversation}, proceedings={Proceedings of the 3rd Warmadewa International Conference on Science, Technology, and Humanity, WICSTH 2023, 27-28 October 2023, Denpasar-Bali, Indonesia}, publisher={EAI}, proceedings_a={WICSTH}, year={2025}, month={4}, keywords={illocutionary act indigenous villagers assertive directive expressive}, doi={10.4108/eai.27-10-2023.2352803} }
- Ni Wayan Kasni
I Wayan Budiarta
A.A. Gede Suarjaya
Year: 2025
Illocutionary Acts Found In Indigenous Villagers’ Conversation
WICSTH
EAI
DOI: 10.4108/eai.27-10-2023.2352803
Abstract
This study entitled Illocutionary Acts Found in Indigenous Villagers’ Conversation. It is aimed at finding the types and the meanings of illocutionary act in those conversation. The data were taken from the conversation of villagers in Penglipuran and Tenganan Pengrisingan village. They were collected through recording, note-taking, and interviewing. All the data were analysed descriptively by applying the theory illocutionary act proposed by Searle (1969). The result of the analysis revealed that there were three types of illocutionary act produced by the speakers, namely assertive, directive, and expressive. The meaning found are expressing opinion, argument, report, experience, request, ordering, criticising, and saying thanks.