Analysis of Lexical Cohesion in the Inaugural Speeches of Presidents

About The Book

This book examines lexical cohesion in the inaugural speeches of Presidents: Olusegun Obasanjo Ibrahim Babangida and Umaru M. Yar’adua. Cohesion plays an important role in text production. In fact cohesion expresses the continuity between one part of the sentence and the other; thereby showing points of contact. The study adopts the cohesive harmony analysis theory by Halliday (1985) and chain interaction theory by Hasan (1984). Using Halliday''s (1985) theory the three speeches were analysed under the categories of repetition synonymy antonymy hyponymy semblance identity and equivalence; while chain interaction was examined under the categories of actor - process actor - process - goal actor - process - location senser - process - phenomenon sayer - process - target and epithet - thing chains. Data has been interpreted statistically for easy analysis and each statistical table carries a brief highlight of the contents within the table. The findings reveal that though all the speeches are coherent the most coherent is Obasanjo’s speech followed by Babangida’s speech and finally Yar’adua. The target group are young researchers probing into inuagural presidential speech.
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