Microsoft Word - 1.Linguistics 7 - 104 (1) Armenian Folia Anglistika Linguistics 42 On Nominalization, A Rhetorical Device in Academic Writing (with special attention to Electronic Engineering research articles) Minoo Khamesian Sanaati Noushirvani University Abstract Writing for science and technology is indubitably proliferating nowadays, which results in scientists being under ever-increasing pressure to write and publish their articles. To fulfill the goal of writing on different scientific domains and publishing, it is of paramount importance to be familiar with the peculiarities of the written style of the language of the discourse community. As far as engineering disciplines are concerned, foremost with electronic engineering in mind, of all various stylistic problems in scientific/technical writing, “nominalization”, as one of the most distinctive linguistic characteristics of academic writing, deserves a lot of attention. Since academic writing is often characterized by high frequency of nominalization, in the hope of providing a new insight into the development of writing for engineering, the present article aims to reveal the importance of the salutary effects of this systemic resource that will put the students and academics on the path of academic excellence. Key words: nominalization, academic writing, rhetorical impact, competence. Introduction As believed, using the English language to successfully communicate scientific findings does not come easily to most authors, i.e. good scientists are not always good writers, particularly when they are non-native. To create a persuasive scientific text one should be able to meet the requirements of the genre and the expectations of the discourse community. It’s beyond suspicion that academic writing plays a crucial role in the dissemination of scientific knowledge, the latter being the main and most effective means of communication within different spheres of scholarship. It has been mentioned time and again that the style of academic writing is depersonalized or objective, since it concentrates on the field of discourse, the subject matter or the content of research findings as well as follows a conventionalized format with specifications on the number of pages and length of report. This creates a need for a specialized information packaging and texture regarding not only the economy of words, but also retaining the sophistication and scholarly taste through which a Linguistics Armenian Folia Anglistika 43 particular text can be marked as academic. One of the key strategies to achieve information density in academic writing as well as objectivity is nominalization. This paper analyses the effects of nominalization in achieving word economy and information density as well as objectivity in the writing of an electronic engineering research article. In the present study the analysis concentrates on verb and adjective based nominalized items of Romance affixation which are believed to be ubiquitous in academic and professional writing. As Biber puts it, “They are often used to expand an idea and integrate information laconically” (Biber 1988:45). Bhatia (1993) also maintains that nominalizations often refer to abstract concepts and generalizations; they can be overused in formal register as well, especially when writers desire to give the text an enhanced style. On the other hand, according to Halliday, nominalization as a process is used in scientific discourse to “create technical taxonomies; it helps the writer to relate one process to another and thus create chains of reasoning” (Halliday 1998:195). Francis states that, “nominalization is a synoptic interpretation of reality: it freezes the processes and makes them static, so that they can be talked about and evaluated. In other words, they are no longer about what is happening, but what is being internalised and ‘factualised’ by society as to the status of what has already happened: the relationships between events rather than the events themselves” (Francis 1990:54). Being constantly utilized in all aspects of such a broad discipline as electronic engineering is, it is crucial for the students concerned with their career advancement and scientific development to understand and perform well in the language. As far as the frequency of nominalizations is concerned, we should hasten to add that they were found to occur most frequently in academic papers: 92 occurrences per 1,000 words, as compared to 27 per 1,000 in conversations, 56 per 1,000 in lectures, and 55 per 1,000 in letters (Chafe & Danielewicz 1987). Halliday also describes two advantages of nominalization: “[w]hen a figure ... is reworded ... in a nominalized form; a considerable amount of energy is released, in terms of the two semantic potentials; the potential for referring, and the potential for expanding. That is, for transforming the flux of experience into configurations of semiotic categories, and for building up such configurations into sequences of reasoned argument” (Halliday 1998:197). It is also believed that lexical nominalizations can sometimes reduce reader comprehension. According to Bhatia, nominalizations in academic genre “have gained a certain degree of notoriety” because of their prevalence but also due to their “pomposity” (Bhatia 1991:217). As he maintains, nominalization is considered a convention in academic writing, being employed for specific communicative function, which requires shared knowledge of discourse community. Hitchings (2013), also mentions that nominalizations give priority to actions rather than to the people responsible for them. Sometimes this is apt, because responsibility is Armenian Folia Anglistika Linguistics 44 not considered to be relevant. Hitchings believes they are an instrument of manipulation, in politics and in business for they emphasize products and results, rather than the processes by which products and results are achieved (). However, it has been shown that nominalizations are able to fulfill certain communicative goals and to function as rhetorical devices enabling scientific writers to present their findings in a clear and concise way. Analysis: Characteristics of Nominalization in Academic Writing In this part of the paper we concentrate on the analysis of the rhetorical impact of using nominalizations in an electronic engineering research article, published in “Journal of Electrical and Electronic Engineering”, 2014, Vol. 2(1), pp. 9-16; Available at: . Nominalization, as the passages adduced below reveal, has converted verbs (actions or events) as well as adjectives into nouns (things, concepts, or people). (1) Ghana has developed a Strategic National Energy Plan (2006- 2020) [6] with issues concerning energy efficiency, electrification, elimination of power shortage and liberalisation of the power generation market, which will allow independent power producers to add their generated power to the national grid. (2) The use of the off-grid PV system depends on the comparative costs, affordability, quality of service, and accessibility of other energy options which are locally available. (3) The equipment costs are the initial costs incurred at the beginning of the PV system electrification whilst the operational costs include the running costs, maintenance and replacement costs. (4) Energy demand is increasing day in day out due to increase in population, urbanization and industrialization with its concomitant lifestyle. The world’s fossil fuel supply e.g. coal, petroleum and natural gas will thus be depleted in a few hundred years [1]. (5) Energy plays a pivotal role in our daily activities. For this reason, the degree of development and civilization of a country is measured by the amount of utilization of energy by it citizenry. (6) In order to ensure that there are no defects or inefficiency in the Linguistics Armenian Folia Anglistika 45 PV system which is usually caused by poor maintenance or ageing of its components [14], it is essential to collect accurate data for the long term performance analysis of the system. Thus, in the given passages verbs electrify; eliminate; liberalise; maintain; generate; replace; urbanize; industrialize, etc. have been turned to electrification; elimination; liberalization; maintenance; generation; and replacement; urbanization; industrialization, etc. A similar process of nominalization can be observed in adjective → noun transfers: efficient; affordable; and accessible into efficiency; affordability; and accessibility. We cannot but say that, when a verb or an adjective is nominalized, it becomes a concept rather than an action, or feature. As a consequence, the “tone” of the writing becomes more abstract and also more formal. Nominalizations, being predominantly of Romance origin, here account for the scarcity of their expressive-emotional-evaluative overtones. It is generally assumed that for native speakers of English words of Romance origin often denote something very general and abstract. (Akhmanova & Idzelis 1978). This is also in line with the widely held view that nominalizations tend to be associated with academic writing as they can assist in maintaining an impersonal tone, often by deleting a human agent within a given sentence. We cannot but notify that nominalization could enable the author to argue for a certain idea without his personal involvement. Otherwise stated, it facilitates the author with being able to eliminate the need to specify participants, such as the agent and the patient, resulting in focus in the proposition to be shifted from the “doer” to the “deed”. This can be equated with the concept of ‘objectivity’ which is one of the peculiarities of scientific/technical writing. Moreover, as the extracted sentences show, several complex abstract ideas are also packed into one sentence. As a consequence, according to Christie nominalized phrases “abstract away from immediate, lived experiences, to build instead truths, abstractions, generalizations, and arguments” (Christie 2001:66), resulting in the participation of normalized words in the process. As easily recognizable, when verbs and adjectives are nominalized, they become concepts rather than actions. As a result, the writer is provided with the chance of increasing the amount and density of information to make further comment or observation about the concept in the clause. For exsample, (7) The required load on a daily basis for the premise is calculated and estimated. The verbs calculated and estimated are nominalized, so: (8) The calculation and estimation of the required load on a daily basis for the premise, resulting in: Armenian Folia Anglistika Linguistics 46 (9) The calculation and estimation of the required load on a daily basis for the premise is 43534.4 Wh/day or 43.53 kWh/day calculated earlier. Consequently, according to the above examples, the verbs in the first sentence are nominalized to construct the adduced sentence, and this gives the author a chance to add more information by commenting upon the newly formed concept. According to Jamshid (2005), nominalization can be characterized by “information density”, which is hard to achieve with more congruent use of the verbs. This means, more meanings can be packed into nouns than into verbs thereby opening up for the nominalized process more expressive possibilities as a result of the fact that more operations in terms of modification, subordination, coordination can be made on nouns than on verbs. The motivation for nominalization may be that the turning of a verb into a noun helps the readers to identify the processes and events that are being subject to study. In other words, it is easier to identify that we are studying, for example, the elimination of power shortage than power shortage is eliminated. Conclusion Suffice to say that language and science are interconnected, otherwise stated, learning science is to learn a language created for codifying, extending and transmitting scientific knowledge. As Martin (1993a: 200) maintains: “(...) in science, language is a fundamental tool. It is used to classify, decompose and explain, and to recount the investigations that form the basis of a scientific world view. It follows that to be illiterate in science is to be denied access to a crucial aspect of its technology. (...) Science cannot be understood ‘in your own words’. It has evolved a special use of language in order to interpret the world in its own, not in common sense, terms.” The conclusion could be drawn that nominalization being a marker of academic writing significantly increases the general volume of information in an economical way and contributes to the objectivity of the text. Otherwise stated, nominalizations render the text more formal for they enable the author to incorporate more information, hence more complex sentences. Being marked as a peculiarity of scientific/technical writing, it does not seem unreasonable to nominalize verbs and adjectives quite often in EAP. Nominalizations enable a writer to classify events as abstract things and predicate over them. This very useful conceptual and linguistic operation is not least made extensive use of in all scientific texts. Since nominalization is an essential resource for constructing scientific discourse, we are hoping to help EAP learners with handling the kind of language they need to write in order to meet the publication standards required, enabling them to face an Linguistics Armenian Folia Anglistika 47 increasing demand for academic writing competence. References: 1. Akhmanova, O.S., Idzelis, R.F. (1987) What is the English We Use. M.: Moscow University Press. 2. Bhatia, V.K. (1992) Discourse Functions and Pragmatics of Mixing: Advertising Across Cultures, World Englishes, Vol. 11, N 2/3, pp. 195-215. 3. Bhatia, V.K. (1993) Analysing Genre: Language Use in Professional Settings. London: Longman. 4. Biber, D. (1988) Variation Across Speech and Writing. Cambridge: CUP. 5. Chafe, W. and Danielewicz, J. (1987) Properties of Spoken and Written Language. // Comprehending Oral and Written Language. / Ed. by R. Horowitz & S. Samuels. San Diego, C.A.: Academic Press Inc., pp. 83-113. 6. Christie, F. (2001) The Development of Abstraction in Adolescence in Subject English. // Developing Advanced Literacy in First and Second Language: Meaning with Power. / Ed. by M. Schleppegrell and M.C. Colombi. Mahwah, N.J.: Erlbaum, pp. 45-66. 7. Francis, G. (1990) Theme in the Daily Press. / Occasional Papers in Systemic Linguistics. Vol. 4, pp. 51‐87. 8. Halliday, M.A.K. (1985) Introduction to Functional Grammar. London: Arnold. 9. Halliday, M.A.K. (1998) Things and Relations: Regrammaticising Experience as Technical Knowledge. // Reading Science: Critical and Functional Perspectives on Discourses of Science. / Ed. by J.R. Martin and R. Veel. London/New York: Routledge. pp.185-237. 10. Hitchings, H. (2013) The Dark Side of Verbs as Nouns. // The New York Times. Available at: [Accessed October 2015]. 11. Jamshid, I. (2005) Grammatical Metaphor. Available at: [Accessed October 2015]. 12. Martin, J.R. (1993a) Literacy in Science: Learning to Handle Text as Technology. // Writing Science: Literacy and Discursive Power. / Ed. by M.A.K. Halliday and J.R. Martin. London: The Falmer Press, pp. 221-267. Armenian Folia Anglistika Linguistics 48 ²Ýí³Ý³Ï³Ý³óáõÙÁ áñå»ë Ñé»ïáñ³Ï³Ý Ñݳñù ·Çï³Ï³Ý ËáëùáõÙ (¿É»ÏïñáݳÛÇÝ ×³ñï³ñ³·ÇïáõÃÛ³Ý áÉáñïÇ ·Çï³Ï³Ý Ñá¹í³ÍÝ»ñÇ ÑÇÙ³Ý íñ³) Ü»ñϳÛáõÙë ·ÇïáõÃÛ³Ý ¨ ï»ËÝáÉá·Ç³ÛÇ ëñÁÝÃ³ó ½³ñ·³óÙ³Ý å³ÛÙ³ÝÝ»- ñáõÙ ³×áõÙ ¿ ·ÇïáõÃÛ³Ý ï³ñμ»ñ μݳ·³í³éÝ»ñáõÙ ·Çï³Ï³Ý Ñá¹í³ÍÝ»ñ ·ñ»Éáõ ÙÇïáõÙÁ: ²Ûë ³éáõÙáí ß³ï ϳñ¨áñ ¿, áñ ·ÇïݳϳÝÝ»ñÁ ͳÝáà ÉÇÝ»Ý ïíÛ³É ¹ÇëÏáõñëÇí ѳÝñáõÛÃÇ ·ñ³íáñ ËáëùÇ É»½í³á×³Ï³Ý ³é³ÝÓݳѳïÏáõÃÛáõÝÝ»- ñÇÝ: ׳ñï³ñ³·ÇïáõÃÛ³Ý ¨ ³é³çÇÝ Ñ»ñÃÇÝ Ù»ù»Ý³ßÇÝáõÃÛ³Ý μݳ·³í³éáõÙ Ç ÃÇíë ·Çï³ï»ËÝÇÏ³Ï³Ý ï»ùëï»ñÇ É»½íÇ á×Ç Ñ»ï ϳåí³Í ³ÛÉ ËݹÇñÝ»ñÇ Ñ³ïϳå»ë ϳñ¨áñíáõÙ ¿ ³Ýí³Ý³Ï³Ý³óÙ³Ý՝ áñå»ë ³Ï³¹»ÙÇ³Ï³Ý ·ñ³íáñ ËáëùÇ ³é³í»É ï³ñμ»ñ³ÏÇã É»½í³Ï³Ý ѳïϳÝÇßÇ ¹»ñÁ: ø³ÝÇ áñ ³Ûë »ñ¨áõÛÃÁ μ³í³Ï³ÝÇÝ Ñ³×³Ë ¿ ѳݹÇåáõÙ ·Çï³Ï³Ý ·ñ³íáñ ËáëùáõÙ, ëáõÛÝ Ñá¹í³ÍÁ Ýå³ï³Ï áõÝÇ μ³ó³Ñ³Ûï»Éáõ ¹ñ³ ϳñ¨áñáõÃÛáõÝÝ áõ ¹ñ³Ï³Ý ³½¹»óáõÃÛáõÝÁ áõë³ÝáÕÝ»ñÇ ¨ ·ÇïݳϳÝÝ»ñÇ ·Çï³Ï³Ý ·ñ³íáñ Ëáë- ùÇ ½³ñ·³óÙ³Ý ·áñÍÁÝóóáõÙ: Номинация как риторический прием в научном тексте (на материале научных статей в области электронной инженерии) В настоящее время вместе со стремительным развитием науки и технологий возрастает необходимость написания научных статей, что требует определенных знаний лингвостилистических особенностей письменной речи того или иного профессионального дискурса. В статье рассматриваются лингвостилистические особенности научно-технических текстов в области архитектуры, в частности машиностроения, выделяется особая роль номинации как наиболее выразительного языкового средства письменной речи. Явление номинации в научной речи встречается довольно часто, в статье обосновывается важность номинации, а также рассматриваются проблемы ее правильного использования при развитии навыков научной письменной речи у студентов и преподавателей.