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Linguostylistic peculiarities of a feature article






3.2.1. Generally speaking, the language found in a feature article has much in common with that used for news reporting and it is quite natural, since both genres belong to the newspaper style and are written by journalists. For example, although feature articles do not usually contain such a large amount of quoted material as is found in many news reports, the ways of introducing it are often very similar. Dashes, also, are rather freely used, and for similar purposes.

3.2.2. There are, however, certain differences of style both on the structural-grammatical and lexical levels.

Structurally feature articles are characterized by:

· a different size of paragraphs: very short paragraphs, typical of a news report, are unlikely in a feature article, where they are usually rather long;

· rather a wide use of rhetorical questions which would be absolutely unlikely in a news report. Rhetorical questions are usually addressed to the reader in a attempt to make him / her feel involved in a way that would be inappropriate for a news report;

· the use of certain grammatical forms and constructions suggesting spoken English style: e.g. contracted verb forms like it’s, I’ve, he’s etc.;

· the use of a successive Object Subordinate Clause introduced by the conjunction ‘that’ as a separate sentence whichsounds more of an afterthought and produces an impression of colloquial speech.

3.2.3. Since journalists can usually spend more time on writing a feature article than they can do on news reports, and also, probably, have rather more space at their disposal, they are able to give a freer reign to their own individual stylistic tastes. Hence, rather an extensive use of emotionally-coloured language elements.

In addition to the vocabulary typical of news reports – newspaper cliché s and other stereotyped forms of expression – a feature article is characterized by a wide use of:

· colloquial words and word-combinations;

· slangisms and professionalisms;

· highly emotive and thoroughly evaluative words;

· a deliberate combination of different strata of vocabulary, e.g. colloquial and bookish words, which enhances the emotional effect;

· trite stylistic devices, especially, metaphors and epithets, e.g. a price explosion, crazy policies, international climate;

· traditional periphrases, e.g. Wall Street (American financial circles), Downing Street (The British Government), Fleet Street (the London press) etc.

· But genuine stylistic means are also frequently used, which helps the writer to bring his / her idea home to the reader through the associations that genuine imagery arouses. Practically any stylistic device may be found in a feature article, and when aptly used, such devices prove to be powerful means of appraisal, of expressing a personal attitude to the matter in hand, of exercising the necessary emotional effect on the reader. Note the following example:

“That this huge slice of industry should become a battleground in which public cash is used as a whip with which to lash workers is a scandal. …Yet it is the workers who are being served up as the lambs for sacrifice, and it is public money that is used to stoke the fires of the sacrificial pyre ”. (Morning Star) The stylistic effect of these sustained similes is essentially satirical.

A similar effect is frequently achieved by the use of metaphor, irony, the breaking-up of set-expressions, the stylistic use of word-building, allusions, etc.

Two types of allusions can be distinguished in newspaper article writing: a. allusions to political and other facts of the day which are indispensable and have no stylistic value, and b. historical, literary and biblical allusions which are often used to create a specific stylistic effect, largely – satirical.

· The emotional force of expression is often enhanced by the use of various syntactical stylistic devices: a. parallel constructions, b. various types of repetition, rhetorical questions and other syntactical means.

Yet, the role of expressive language means and stylistic devices in a feature article should not be overestimated. They stand out against the essentially neutral background.

Generally speaking, tradition reigns supreme in the language of the newspaper as a separate functional variety of the English language. Individual forms of expression and fresh genuine stylistic means are comparatively rare even in such ‘borderline’ newspaper genres as a feature article and an editorial or a leading article, so, whatever stylistically original lingual means one may encounter in certain newspaper publications, they cannot compete with the essentially traditional mode of expression characteristic of newspaper English in general.

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