Pragmatic Strategies in Selected Digital News Articles
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Olusegun Oladele JegedeDepartment of Languages and Literature, Lead City University, Ibadan 200255, NigeriaAuthor
Abstract
Despite extensive research on news discourse, limited attention has been given to how pragmatic strategies function in digital news to shape meaning and guide audience interpretation. Analysing a corpus of news articles from various online sources—such as The Guardian, BBC News, and The New York Times—the study aims to examine how pragmatic strategies are employed in digital news discourse to shape meaning and guide audience interpretation, with objectives to (1) investigate how mitigation strategies temper evaluative claims and manage uncertainty, (2) analyse how emphasis directs attention to significant information and signals importance, (3) explore how politeness maintains social harmony, manages face concerns, and fosters audience engagement, and (4) assess how evidentiality establishes credibility, authority, and trust through explicit attribution to sources within the news report. A purposive sampling technique was used to collect 60 digital news articles published between 2020 and 2024 from reputable online platforms, from which 20 extracts were systematically selected for detailed analysis. Data were collected through content analysis and analysed using Relevance Theory. The findings reveal that digital news reports (1) employ mitigation to temper evaluative claims and manage uncertainty, (2) use emphasis to foreground significant information and signal importance, (3) apply politeness to maintain social harmony and manage face concerns, and (4) rely on evidentiality to establish credibility, authority, and trust through explicit source attribution. The study concludes that digital journalism consciously uses pragmatic strategies to construct meaning, manage face, and influence public perception, demonstrating their role as effective tools in shaping interpretation and guiding audience engagement in online news discourse.
Keywords:
Corpus Linguistics, Digital Humanities, Digital News Discourse, Online Journalism, PragmaticsReferences
Issue
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