Illocutionary speech acts of the devil character in the dialogue of the animated film Adam and Iblis on YouTube One Way Production

Kaamilah, Marisa Hasna and Nurlinah, Nurlinah and Djaliel, Maman Abdul Illocutionary speech acts of the devil character in the dialogue of the animated film Adam and Iblis on YouTube One Way Production. Illocutionary Speech Acts of the Devil Character in the Dialogue of the Animated Film Adam and Iblis on YouTube One Way Production, 5 (3). pp. 2537-2549. ISSN 2809-5367

[img]
Preview
Text
JURNAL FIX.pdf

Download (454kB) | Preview
Official URL: https://pembahas.dialeks.id/index.php/jp/article/v...

Abstract

The research on illocutionary speech acts of the Devil character in the dialogue of the animated film Adam and Iblis on YouTube One Way Production contains various aspects of the meaning of speech acts from each dialogue, especially in the Devil character. This study aims to describe: 1) the types of illocutionary speech acts in the dialogue of the animated film Adam and Iblis; 2) the function of illocutionary speech acts in the dialogue of the animated film Adam and Iblis. This study uses John R. Searle's theory which classifies illocutionary speech acts into 5 types, namely; assertive, expressive, directive, commissive, and declarative illocutionary. The method used in this study is descriptive qualitative with the technique of listening and noting in data collection, and the pragmatic matching method in data analysis based on time triangulation. This study produced 309 data types of illocutionary speech acts with a description of 126 assertive illocutionary data, 58 expressive illocutionary data, 117 directive illocutionary data, 8 commissive illocutionary data. Meanwhile, in the devil's dialogue in the animated film Adam and Iblis, there is no declarative illocutionary act found. This study covers various functions of illocutionary speech acts in the dialogue of the animated film Adam and Iblis such as; guessing, estimating, explaining, accusing, forbidding, persuading, praying, fearing, promising and swearing. Assertive illocutionary speech acts are the dominant type of illocutionary speech acts used in the Devil's dialogue in the animated film Adam and Iblis.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: illocutionary speech acts; character; dialogue; animated film
Subjects: Bahasa Arab
Divisions: Fakultas Adab dan Humaniora > Program Studi Bahasa dan Sastra Arab
Depositing User: Marisa Hasna Kaamilah
Date Deposited: 06 Jul 2026 01:12
Last Modified: 06 Jul 2026 01:12
URI: https://digilib.uinsgd.ac.id/id/eprint/133835

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item