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VOCATIVE STRATEGIES IN PERSUASIVE DISCOURSE
Seytzhanov Jetkerbay Elubaevich
Karakalpak State University,
head of Translation Theory and Practice Department,
PhD in Philology, Professor
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15705411
Annotation:
This article examines the communicative and functional
dimensions of vocative expressions – referred to in Uzbek as undalmalar –
within rhetorical discourse. Drawing upon both classical Uzbek literary
exemplars (Navoi’s ghazals) and contemporary analyses in English pragmatics,
it maps how direct address forms operate at the interface of syntax, pragmatics,
and discourse. The study first contextualizes undalmalar in Uzbek poetic
tradition, demonstrating their evolution from dialogic invocation to markers of
interpersonal stance. It then integrates findings from formal syntactic accounts,
speech-act theory, and digital corpus investigations to reveal four principal
functions of vocatives: anchoring addressee participation, signaling speaker
attitude, managing discourse turns, and indexing social solidarity. By
juxtaposing Sufi-inspired classical uses with modern pragmatic markers, the
article argues that vocatives remain pivotal in constructing persuasive texture
and engagement across genres.
Keywords:
vocatives, undalmalar, rhetorical discourse, discourse
pragmatics, speech-act theory, Uzbek poetic tradition, digital corpus, persuasive
engagement
Introduction
Vocative expressions –
undalmalar
in Uzbek – serve as direct linguistic
appeals to addressees and occupy a central role in shaping interpersonal
dynamics within rhetorical discourse. Far from being mere ornamental devices,
vocatives actively engage listeners or readers, marking shifts in speaker stance
and orchestrating turn-taking in both spoken and written genres (Hill, 2007). In
classical Uzbek poetry, such as the ghazals of Alisher Navoi,
undalmalar
not only
preserve their dialogic origins but also acquire layers of spiritual and aesthetic
resonance, reflecting Sufi notions of invocation and cosmic address (Quronov et
al., 2010). Contemporary pragmatic research further reveals that vocatives
evolve into discourse markers, indexing solidarity, politeness, and affective
stance even when their original deictic force is reduced (Kleinknecht & Souza,
2017).
This article traces the functional trajectory of
undalmalar
across rhetorical
contexts. It begins by situating vocatives at the syntax–pragmatics interface,
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where their formal visibility interacts with illocutionary projections (Hill, 2007).
It then examines their classical deployment in Uzbek poetic traditions,
demonstrating how spiritual invocation and aesthetic expression intertwine.
Finally, by drawing on digital corpus studies of modern discourse, the study
illustrates how vocatives persist as tools for managing engagement and fostering
persuasive texture in contemporary communicative settings (García & Hill,
2023). Through this integrated narrative, the article aims to illuminate the
enduring communicative and functional dimensions of vocative strategies from
their historical roots to their present-day pragmatic adaptations.
Classical Poetic Tradition of
Undalmalar
In classical Uzbek poetry,
undalmalar
function as more than mere
ornamental vocatives; they form an integral component of the text’s dialogic
architecture and spiritual ethos. Quronov, Ko‘matov, and Mirzaev (2010)
observe that in premodern ghazals such appeals often mark transitions between
lyrical subjectivity and implied addressee presence, creating a simulated
dialogue that sustains reader engagement. For instance, in Navoi’s ghazal
“Dilband,” the repeated invocation of “O khush dil” (“O joyful heart”) does not
simply address an abstract reader but gestures toward the poet’s own spiritual
longing, merging personal introspection with communal sentiment (Quronov,
Ko‘matov, & Mirzaev, 2010).
Mulla Xo‘jaeva (2005) extends this view by showing how Sufi influences
infuse
undalmalar
with performative potency. In her analysis of Navoi’s mystical
verses, she demonstrates that vocative forms such as “Ey dilbar” (“O beloved”)
oscillate between earthly love and divine invocation, thereby situating the
reader within a layered interpretive frame that transcends conventional
speaker–hearer boundaries. Such dual resonance amplifies the ghazal’s affective
register, inviting readers to partake in both aesthetic appreciation and spiritual
discourse (Mulla Xo‘jaeva, 2005).
Similarly, Umarova (2005) highlights the syntactic flexibility of
undalmalar
in Navoi’s “Badoe‘ ul-bido‘ya,” where vocative phrases can appear in isolated
verses or woven into complex rhetorical parallelisms. She notes that this
freedom of placement allows the poet to manipulate thematic emphasis, as when
the vocative “Ey sabr” (“O patience”) punctuates a couplet on suffering, thereby
underscoring the moral imperative embedded within the lyrical narrative
(Umarova, 2005).
Together, these studies reveal that classical
undalmalar
serve four
interrelated functions: they reconstruct addressee presence within poetic
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monologue, facilitate spiritual invocation rooted in Sufi aesthetics, enable
syntactic and rhetorical variation, and heighten emotional engagement. By
weaving together dialogic trace, performative invocation, and formal versatility,
Navoi and his predecessors established a model of vocative practice that
continues to inform contemporary analyses of rhetorical address.
Syntax–Pragmatics Interface of Vocatives
At the intersection of syntax and pragmatics, vocative expressions exhibit a
unique dual visibility: they occupy syntactic positions yet project illocutionary
import beyond propositional content. Hill (2007) argues that vocatives
constitute a distinct speech-act projection, interfacing with the force of the
utterance without contributing to its truth-conditional meaning. For example, in
the English sentence “Anna, could you pass the salt?”, “Anna” is not an argument
of the predicate but a separate vocative projection that prompts addressee
recognition and engagement (Hill, 2007).
Building on this framework, Kubo (2004) employs speech-act theory to
classify vocatives as performative elements that enact a calling illocution. Kubo
distinguishes between
appelatives
(which summon attention) and
attributives
(which comment on the addressee), showing that both types navigate
conventional locutionary bounds to realize distinct pragmatic effects. In her
analysis of speech data, attributive vocatives such as “You clever thing” operate
to index speaker attitude – almost parenthetically – while appelatives like
“Listen, everyone” manage turn-taking and information flow (Kubo, 2004).
Formal syntactic analyses corroborate these pragmatic findings by
identifying structural diagnostics of vocative visibility. Vocative DPs typically
occupy an adjunct-like position, often marked off by prosodic pauses or commas
in written form, and resist internal modification by other functional projections
(Hill, 2007). This configurational autonomy underpins their capacity to float
outside core clause structure, enabling speakers to insert them at clause-initial,
medial, or terminal sites without disrupting argument structure (Kubo, 2004).
By mapping how vocatives project illocutionary force while remaining
syntactically peripheral, these studies illuminate their fundamental role in
orchestrating addressee engagement. Vocatives thus emerge as hybrid elements:
grammatically detachable yet pragmatically indispensable for framing discourse
acts and managing interpersonal dynamics.
In the age of social media and instant messaging, vocatives continue to play
a crucial role in managing interaction and expressing stance, even when
traditional dialogic contexts are absent. García and Hill (2023) conducted a
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large-scale analysis of nominal vocatives in Twitter discourse, showing that
forms such as “hey” + name persist as turn-openers and attention-signalers,
despite the asynchronous nature of tweets. They found that nearly 18 % of
direct replies begin with a vocative, suggesting that users exploit these forms to
reframe public posts as conversational exchanges (García & Hill, 2023).
McDougall (2018) extends this insight to private text messaging,
demonstrating that vocatives – especially affectionate or playful ones like “babe”
or “dude” – function primarily to index social solidarity and mitigate face-
threatening acts. In her corpus of smartphone conversations, attributive
vocatives accounted for over 25 % of all vocative tokens, underscoring their role
as markers of relational closeness rather than simple attention-getting devices
(McDougall, 2018).
Moreover, digital vocatives often undergo reduction and phonetic erosion
(e.g., “yo” for “you”), aligning them with discourse-marker trajectories observed
in face-to-face speech (Kleinknecht & Souza, 2017). Such grammaticalization
processes confirm that vocatives are not static relics of direct address but
dynamic elements adapting to new communicative environments.
By comparing Twitter and texting contexts, contemporary corpora reveal
two main functions of digital vocatives: (1) orchestrating turn-management in
environments lacking immediate feedback, and (2) encoding social bonds
through affective indexing. These findings demonstrate that even in mediated
discourse,
undalmalar
retain their dual heritage as calls to attention and
instruments of interpersonal alignment.
Conclusion
Across historical and contemporary contexts, vocative expressions – or
undalmalar
– demonstrate remarkable functional continuity and adaptability. In
classical Uzbek poetry, they forged a dialogic bridge between the poet’s inner
reflections and the reader’s interpretive presence, enriched by Sufi-inflected
spiritual invocation (Quronov, Ko‘matov, & Mirzaev, 2010; Mulla Xo‘jaeva,
2005). At the same time, formal analyses have situated vocatives at a syntax–
pragmatics nexus, revealing their dual status as structurally detachable yet
illocutionarily potent elements that orchestrate addressee engagement and
manage conversational flow (Hill, 2007; Kubo, 2004).
Contemporary corpus studies confirm that vocatives remain central to
interaction – even in digital media – by opening turns, framing responses, and
indexing interpersonal solidarity (García & Hill, 2023; McDougall, 2018). The
grammaticalization of reduced forms (e.g., “yo,” “dude”) into pragmatic markers
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further underscores their dynamic evolution in response to shifting
communicative environments (Kleinknecht & Souza, 2017).
Together, these perspectives illuminate four core communicative functions
of
undalmalar
: (1) anchoring addressee recognition, (2) signaling speaker
stance, (3) managing discourse structure, and (4) indexing social relationships.
Recognizing this multifunctionality has practical implications for rhetorical
analysis, language teaching, and computational discourse modeling. For
instance, pedagogical materials can incorporate vocative-focused exercises to
enhance learners’ pragmatic competence, while natural language processing
systems might leverage vocative detection to improve dialogue management.
Future research should explore cross-linguistic comparisons of vocative use
in other Turkic traditions and investigate their prosodic correlates in spoken
discourse. Such studies will deepen our understanding of how
undalmalar
continue to shape persuasive texture and interpersonal alignment across
diverse genres and media.
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