Abstract:
English being a link language in Sri Lanka, a multicultural country, plays a
significant role in sharing opinions on social media. A rapid increase in the
use of Facebook could be observed following the outbreak of the COVID-19
pandemic. It was also observed that a considerable number of Facebook users
in Sri Lanka, approximately 40% of its population, use Facebook for diverse
reasons. The main objective of the study is to explore unique morphological,
syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic features of English used by Sri Lankans,
which are shaped by extralinguistic factors such as socioeconomic, cultural,
psychological, and political influences. In order to accomplish the aforesaid
objective, 200 Facebook posts, including comments and replies made by
academics, politicians, celebrities, differently-abled people, and typical
Facebook users, were analyzed. A qualitative approach was adopted to
align with the objectives of the study. During the data collection process,
Facebook posts and comments in English shared by Sri Lankan Facebook
users were selected using the purposive sampling technique. Discourse
analysis was employed to analyze the data under four themes: morphology,
syntax, semantics, and pragmatics. The overall findings and analysis of the
study revealed several key features across different linguistic categories.
Morphological features explored include abbreviations, reduplications,
compounding, clitics, transliteration, and mother tongue influence. Syntactic
features involve changes in word order and sentence patterns, subject-
verb agreement, negation, voice, ellipsis, coordination, subordination,
sentence fragments, interrogation, punctuation, neglect of capitalization
rules, and reduced expressions. Semantic features encompass connotation
and denotation, cohesion, presupposition, and the influence of the mother
tongue. Finally, pragmatic features highlight a range of speech acts, such
as emphases, formal and informal expressions, sarcastic remarks, and
translanguaging. The research concludes that the English language used by
Sri Lankans in Facebook posts, comments and replies encompasses unique
linguistic features, influenced by socioeconomic, cultural, psychological, and
political factors.