TY - JOUR T1 - Certainty and Conventional Indirectness in Persian and American Request Forms AU - Abdolrezapour, Parisa AU - Tavakoli, Mansoor AU - Eslami-Rasekh, Abbass JO - The Social Sciences VL - 5 IS - 4 SP - 332 EP - 339 PY - 2010 DA - 2001/08/19 SN - 1818-5800 DO - sscience.2010.332.339 UR - https://makhillpublications.co/view-article.php?doi=sscience.2010.332.339 KW - requestive speech act KW -politeness KW -conventionally indirect strategies KW -Certainty KW -Isfahan KW -Iran AB - Several studies have been carried out with the goal of investigating cross-cultural differences which exist between Persian and English, focusing on the realization of different speech acts in an Iranian context. This study focuses on the similarities and differences between Americans and Iranians with regard to the speaker’s assumed expectations of compliance in choosing from the conventionally indirect spectrum. The question is how uncertain the speaker was that the addressee would comply with the request when she/he chose a particular conventionally indirect request. The participants consisted of 22 American native speakers studying at Fresno State University and 30 Iranian M.A. students studying English at Isfahan University. The data for this study were collected via role plays, post-performance interviews and questionnaires. The results obtained show that in comparable situations, the Americans are generally more certain that the addressee would comply with the request than Iranians. It is argued that conventional indirectness appears to reflect different social meanings in English and Persian and that such differences should be taken into account in EFL instruction and in cross-cultural studies. ER -