Styles
Styles
Styles
Each style, however, can be recoquized by one or more leading features which are
especially conspicuous. For instance the use of special terminology is a lexical
characteristics of the style of scientific prose, and one by which it can easily be
recognized.
The English literary system has evolved a number of styles easily distinguishable one
from another. They are not homogeneous and fall into several variants of having
some central point of resemblance or better to say all integrated by the invariant -
i.e. the abstract ideal system.
They are:
Each of mentioned here styles can be expressed in two forms: written and oral.
Stylistics is a sides that examines the complex of stylistically marked elements of any
language level.
The literary communication, most often (but not always) materialized in the written
form, is not homogeneous, and proceeding from its function (purpose) we speak of
different functional styles. As the whole of the language itself, functional styles are
also changeable. Their quantity and quality change in the course of their
development. At present most scholars differentiate such functional styles: scientific,
official, publicist, newspaper, belles-lettres.
Official style, or the style of official documents, is the most conservative one. It
preserves cast-iron forms of structuring and uses syntactical constructions and words
long known as archaic and not observed anywhere else. Addressing documents and
official letters, signing them, expressing the reasons and considerations leading to
the subject of the document (letter) - all this is strictly regulated both lexically and
syntactically. All emotiveness and subjective modality are completely banned out of
this style.
Belles-lettres style, or the style of imaginative literature may be called the richest
register of communication: besides its own language means which are not used in
any other sphere of communication, belles-lettres style makes ample use of other
styles too, for in numerous works of literary art we find elements of scientific, official
and other functional types of speech. Besides informative and persuasive functions,
also found in other functional styles, the belles-lettres style has a unique task to
impress the reader aesthetically. The form becomes meaningful and carries
additional information as you must have seen from previous chapters. Boundless
possibilities of expressing one's thoughts and feelings make the belles-lettres style a
highly attractive field of research for a linguist.
The second point deals with the flexibility of style boundaries: the borders within
which a style presumably functions are not rigid and allow various degrees of
overlapping and melting into each other. It is not accidental that rather often we
speak of intermediate cases such as the popular scientific style which combines the
features of scientific and belles-lettres styles,or the style of new journalism which is a
combination of publicist, newspaper and belles-lettres styles etc.