Formal language is a functional variety of language that is used in contexts where the relationship between participants is distant, the subject matter is serious, or the occasion is ceremonial. Unlike informal language, which often relies on shared situational knowledge, formal language tends to be more explicit, cohesive, and follows the conventions of Standard English.
In formal contexts, speakers and writers use politeness strategies to manage the “face” of their audience. This is based on Brown and Levinson’s Politeness Theory, which suggests that every individual has two types of “face” needs.
| Strategy Type | Purpose | Formal Linguistic Features |
|---|---|---|
| Negative Politeness | To show respect and minimize imposition on the audience’s autonomy. | Use of honorifics (e.g., Your Honour), modal verbs to soften requests (e.g., Might I suggest…), and passive voice to remove direct agency. |
| Positive Politeness | To build rapport and indicate that the speaker and audience share goals. | Use of inclusive pronouns (e.g., We as a nation…), and formal compliments or acknowledgments of the audience’s contributions. |
EXAM TIP: When analyzing a formal text, don’t just identify a politeness strategy. Explain which face need is being met and why the speaker felt the need to protect it in that specific context.
Formal language serves to establish and maintain the boundaries between participants. This is often referred to as Social Distance.
Social distance exists on a continuum:
\$\$ \text{Intimate} \longleftrightarrow \text{Close} \longleftrightarrow \text{Distant} \$\$
Formal language increases social distance by avoiding personal references and slang, ensuring the relationship remains professional or hierarchical.
Authority is the perceived power held by a speaker or writer. Formal language reinforces this by:
* Imperative Mood: Used by those in power to give instructions (e.g., “You are required to submit…”).
* Standard English: Adhering strictly to prescriptive norms signals education and high socioeconomic status.
* Passive Voice: Creates an air of objective detachment, making instructions seem like “the law” rather than a personal whim (e.g., “It has been decided…” vs “I decided…”).
KEY TAKEAWAY: Formal language is a tool for maintaining hierarchies. By using a high register, a speaker signals that they are in a position of expertise or power, thereby discouraging the audience from challenging them.
Formal language is frequently used to signal a speaker’s expertise—their specialized knowledge in a particular field.
VCAA FOCUS: Be careful with jargon. If the audience consists of fellow experts, jargon builds rapport (in-group solidarity). If the audience is laypeople, jargon can obfuscate meaning or simply establish authority by making the speaker seem superior.
Formal language is not always about distance; it can be used to create a “safe” communicative space.
By using non-discriminatory language (politically correct language), speakers avoid causing offense to marginalized groups. This ensures that the discourse remains inclusive and minimizes the risk of social conflict.
Taboos are topics that cause discomfort (e.g., death, bodily functions, sex). Formal language provides tools to discuss these without causing “loss of face”:
* Euphemisms: Using a mild or indirect expression to replace a harsh one (e.g., “passed away” for “died”, “collateral damage” for “civilian deaths”).
* Medical/Technical Lexis: Using clinical terms to distance the speaker from the physical reality of a taboo topic.
While informal language builds rapport through intimacy, formal language builds rapport through mutual respect. By adhering to formal conventions, a speaker shows they value the occasion and the audience’s status.
COMMON MISTAKE: Students often think rapport can only be built through informal language (slang, jokes). In Unit 3, remember that formal language builds rapport by respecting negative face needs—giving the audience space and showing professional courtesy.
Formal language can be used to either reveal or hide the truth, depending on the intent of the author (often seen in Public Language).
In legal, medical, or scientific contexts, formal language is used for maximum precision. The goal is to eliminate ambiguity.
* Example: A legal contract uses repetitive, specific lexis to ensure there is only one possible interpretation.
Obfuscation involves making a message difficult to understand, often to hide an unpleasant truth or avoid accountability.
* Doublespeak: Language that deliberately obscures the meaning of words (e.g., “negative patient outcome” for a doctor’s mistake).
* Passive Voice: Used to hide the “doer” of an action (e.g., “Mistakes were made” avoids saying “I made a mistake”).
* Euphemisms as Manipulation: Using “corporate-speak” like “right-sizing” to avoid the negative connotations of “firing employees”.
| Purpose | Effect on Audience | Common Contexts |
|---|---|---|
| Clarifying | Increases understanding; provides certainty. | Law, Science, Instruction Manuals. |
| Obfuscating | Decreases understanding; creates confusion. | Politics, Bureaucracy, Corporate PR. |
APPLICATION: Look at political speeches or corporate “apologies.” Often, they use highly formal, complex language not to clarify the situation, but to obfuscate blame and protect the organization’s reputation.