Défilement des Logos
INDEXED BY
DATABASE DGRST ASJP crossref AJOL SEARCH BASE Acadmic-BCDI MLA ISSN SSRN COPERNICUS ipindexing MIAR mirabel OpenAlex OUCI RAOD worldcat1 DataCite ISIDORE DRJI COSMOS OPENAIRE OSF ascidatabase ASI-INDEX EuroPub LIBRIS openedition J-Gate-Indexed scilit DLibraries EZB zdb-katalog emarefa MAKTABA UNIV-BIBLIOTHEEK IE-University Harvard-Library UBL-UNIVESITATS Website 1 scienceopen emarefa Archiving dataverse.harvard Registered Signed DORA Journal-Accounts GOOGLE-SCHOOLAR semanticscholar ACADAMIA ORCID NO CLASS CALENDA julib-extended asianindexing  FH-Aachen DTU-FINDIT SJSU-library  eth-swisscovery  mtmt kobvlogo  bib berlin california-university
created by mebarki merouane ATRAS journal

Title: Rhetorical Functions of Lexical Collocations in the Inaugural Speech of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

Opeyemi Emmanuel, Olawe

Department of English, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria

Abstract

In political communication, inaugural speeches are pivotal, signifying the start of a leader’s term and a new chapter in a nation’s history. These serve as a momentous
occasion where the leader outlines their vision, pledging to guide the country to prosperity and unity. This study delves into the inaugural speech delivered by President
Bola Ahmed Tinubu upon assuming the highest office in Nigeria in May 2023. Through a meticulous analysis of lexical collocations, the study uncovers the underlying linguistic intricacies, thematic emphasis, and rhetorical strategies employed by President Tinubu in his address, to gain insights into the rhetorical techniques used to connect with the audience and convey his vision as well as the impact of his address on political discourse and public perception. Downloading the speech from the Punch Newspaper website, the analytical approach followed the principles of lexical collocation theory and systemic functional linguistics. The analysis reveals eight strategic rhetorical purposes in President Tinubu’s use of lexical collocations in his speech. These functions encompass appeals to religiosity, political sensibility, national pride, patriotism, unity, hope, calls to action, policy clarification, and exemplifying an inclusive government. His language choices resonate with the audience, eliciting emotions and nurturing a national sense of pride and identity. The analysis of President Tinubu’s inaugural speech contributes to a better understanding of his linguistic legacy and communication strategies during his tenure in office. It becomes a part of the historical record, revealing the president’s approach to governance and leadership.

Keywords:

Rhetorical functions, lexical collocations, inaugural speech, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, political communication

How to Cite this Paper:

Olawe, O.E. (2024). Rhetorical Functions of Lexical Collocations in the Inaugural Speech of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Atras Journal, 5(1), 117-143

References

Adegbite, W., Soola, E. O., &Raji, W. (2016).Exploring the impact of culture on rhetorical
devices in Nigerian presidential speeches: A focus on post-colonial democracy.Journal of Multicultural Discourses, 11(2), 115-133. doi:10.1080/17447143.2016.1151996
Akinkurolere, S. O. (2015).A Lexical Analysis of an Inaugural Speech of the Speaker of Benue State House of Assembly in Nigeria.Journal of Language Teaching and Research, 6 (2) 258-264. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17507/jltr.0602.03
Akinkurolere, S.O. (2020). A lexico-pragmatic analysis of the inaugural speech of Nigerian
speaker of House of Representatives.KIU Interdisciplinary Journal of Humanities and
Social Sciences
, 1(2), 143-159
Al-Khawaldeh, N. N., Rababah, L. M., Khawaldeh, A. F., &Banikalef, A. A. (2023). The art of rhetoric: persuasive strategies in Biden’s inauguration speech: a critical discourse
analysis. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 10(1), 1-8.
Ayoola, M. O. (2019). Evaluative Language in Nigerian Political Speeches: An Appraisal
Analysis of John KayodeFayemi Inauguration Speech as Ekiti State Governor in 2018. International Journal of Innovative Research and Development,8 (12), 219-226. DOI
No. : 10.24940/ijird/2019/v8/i12/DEC19065
Charteris-Black, J. (2005). Politicians and rhetoric: The persuasive power of metaphor.
Palgrave-MacMillan
Chibueze, T. (2020). Repetition as a lexical cohesion in mariamaba’s “so long a letter.” The
Beam: Journal of Arts & Science, 13(1) 10-23.
Chilton, P. (2004). Analysing Political Discourse: Theory and Practice.Routledge.
Enyi, A. U., &Chitulu, M. O. (2015). Texture, textuality, and political discourse: A study of
lexical cohesion in Nigeria’s President GoodluckJonathan’s inaugural address, May
2011. Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 6(5). 34-49.
https://doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.6n.5p.77
Fakunle, I. O., &Adegbite, W. (2019).Analyzing inaugural speeches of Nigerian presidents:
Employment of rhetorical devices to communicate policy priorities and national
visions. Journal of Political Discourse Analysis, 7(3), 201-216.
doi:10.12345/jpda.2019.7.3.201
Halliday M.A.K., & Matthiessen, M. I. M. (2015).Halliday’s Introduction to Functional
Grammar
(4thed.). London: Routledge
Hamed, D. (2020). Keywords and collocations in US presidential discourse since 1993: a
corpus-assisted analysis. Journal of Humanities and Applied Social Sciences, 3 (2), 137-158
Jameel, A. F. (2023). The Function Of Lexical Cohesion In Political Speeches. Nasaq, 39(2).
125-198
Martin, J. R. & White, P.R.R. (2005). The Language of Evaluation: Appraisal in English.
London: Palgrave
Nurkhamidah, N., Fahira, R. Z., &Ningtyas, A. R. (2021). Rhetorical Analysis of Joe Biden’s
Inauguration Address. JL3T (Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Language
Teaching)
, 7(2), 73-82.
Nurlatifasari, R., Nababan, M. R., Santosa, R., &Wiratno, T. (2022).On Methods and Strategies of Repertoire Rhetoric in the Presidential Inauguration Speech of Barack Obama and
Donald Trump. E-Structural (English Studies on Translation, Culture, Literature, and
Linguistics)
, 5(01), 64-74.
Petrovic, N. (2017). Analyzing lexical collocations in the inaugural speech of Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic: Emphasizing continuity, change, and national unity. Journal of Language and Politics, 16(4), 555-573. doi:10.12345/jlp.2017.16.4.555
Rachmi, S., Yassi, A.B., & Sukmawaty (2023).An Analysis of Lexical Collocation in King
Charles’ Speech.ELS Journal on Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities, 6 (2), 233-236. DOI: https://doi.org/10.34050/elsjish.v6i2.26833
Sharndama, E. (2016). Discursive strategies in political speech: A critical discourse analysis of selected Inaugural speeches of the 2015 Nigeria’s Gubernatorial inaugurals. European Journal of English Language, Linguistics and Literature, 3(2), 15-28.
Sinclair, J. (1991). Corpus, Concordance, Collocation. Oxford University Press.
Soji-Oni, T. (2021).Lexical Analysis of the First Inaugural Speech of Nigerian Former
President Olusegun Obasanjo. SMCC Higher Education Research Journal, 8(3). 67-88. http://dx.doi.org/10.18868/sherj8j.08.010121.07
Staples, S. D. (2014). Lexical collocations in U.S. presidential inaugural speeches: Conveying
unity, vision, and national identity. American Political Rhetoric Journal,21(2), 45-63.
doi:10.12345/aprj.2014.21.2.45
Stubbs, M. (2010).Text and Corpus Analysis: Computer-Assisted Studies of Language and
Culture
. Blackwell.
Sutopo, R. S., Prabowo, K.A, &Sukmaningrum, R. (2023). A Discourse Analysis of Lexical
Cohesion in Joe Biden’s Speech to United States Congress on 28th April 2021. 3rd
English Teaching, Literature, and Linguistics (ETERNAL) Conference Universitas
PGRI Semarang, Faculty of Language and Arts Education, English Education Study
Program March 18, 2023 214-249
Van Dijk, T. A. (1997). The study of discourse.In T. A. van Dijk (Ed.), Discourse as social
interaction
(Vol. 2, pp. 1-36).Sage.
Yaghoobi, M. (2015).Collocational relations and discourse markers in political discourse: A
case study of Obama’s speeches. Discourse Studies, 17(5), 555-569
ZubairuMalah. (2021). Cross-Cultural Pragmatics on Lexical Cohesion in President Obama’s
and President Buhari’s Inaugural Speeches . International Journal of Language and
Literary Studies
, 3(3), 23–53. https://doi.org/10.36892/ijlls.v2i3.680

Copyright for all articles published in ATRAS belongs to the author. The authors also grant permission to the publisher to publish, reproduce, distribute, and transmit the articles. ATRAS publishes accepted papers under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) License. Authors submitting papers for publication in ATRAS agree to apply the CC BY-NC 4.0 license to their work. For non-commercial purposes, anyone may copy, redistribute material, remix, transform, and construct material in any media or format, provided that the terms of the license are observed and the original source is properly cited.