Articles | Open Access | https://doi.org/10.55640/eijps-05-04-02

Sociolinguistic Study of Discursive Markers

Abdumalikova Dilfuza , Jizzakh state pedagogical university, Uzbekistan

Abstract

This article explores the sociolinguistic dimensions of discourse markers—linguistic elements that organize speech and guide listener interpretation without contributing direct propositional content. Drawing on studies in pragmatics, conversation analysis, and interactional sociolinguistics, the discussion underscores how seemingly trivial markers such as “well,” “so,” “you know,” and their equivalents in other languages play pivotal roles in signaling stance, managing turn-taking, and negotiating social identity. Through examination of multilingual contexts, particularly in Uzbek- and Russian-speaking communities, discourse markers emerge as indicators of group membership and symbols of linguistic capital. They can convey politeness, mitigate disagreement, or highlight alignment with particular social norms, making them central to discussions of language ideology and power. Methodological approaches range from ethnographic fieldwork and qualitative interpretation of recorded interactions to quantitative corpus-based analyses that reveal frequency and distribution across demographic categories such as age, gender, and socioeconomic status. In highlighting these diverse frameworks, the article demonstrates that discourse markers serve as critical tools for shaping interaction and constructing social meaning, thereby meriting dedicated scholarly attention in broader sociolinguistic research.

Keywords

Discourse markers, Sociolinguistics, Pragmatics

References

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How to Cite

Abdumalikova Dilfuza. (2025). Sociolinguistic Study of Discursive Markers. European International Journal of Philological Sciences, 5(04), 8–10. https://doi.org/10.55640/eijps-05-04-02