Secrets of Tagalog Headlines Revealed!: An examination of Tagalog headline grammar

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2011
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Swarthmore College. Dept. of Linguistics
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Thesis (B.A.)
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Award
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en_US
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Full copyright to this work is retained by the student author. It may only be used for non-commercial, research, and educational purposes. All other uses are restricted.
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Abstract
"Award to Artist Who Gives Slums a Human Face" -- Ifwe see that on a newspaper, we understand it despite the fact that it's not a grammatically correct phrase: it's missing articles and verbs, but we know how to read headlinese. We "speak" it. Armed with our native speaker knowledge of English headlinese, could we "speak" a different language's headlinese? Or would it be utterly foreign? Are there different rules to every kind ofheadlinese? This thesis investigates this question by identifying and describing certain features of the headlinese of Tagalog. I then compare Tagalog headlinese to that of English. I found that English and Tagalog share certain features, such as many kinds of ellipsis, or omissions, but differ when it comes to other features, like sentence inversion and tense usage. Tagalog seems to have a unique headline grammar, most notably because of the complete syntactic shuffle seen in its headlinese: Tagalog, a vas language, has headlines that almost always appeared in sva form, much like headlines in English.
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