Abstract
The paper studies the conversational implicature in host and guest conversations with particular reference to host and guests conversations in the BBC Hardtalk show, mostly presented by Stephen Sackur. The paper analyses the various speech turns and speech patterns by the host and his guests from some selected interview transcripts so as to observe the various instances the conversational principles are flouted or violated during the show. the paper adopts Grice’s (1967) theory of implicature, an assumption which systematically shows how a person gets from what is said to what is meant, or from the expressed meaning to the implied meaning but limits its scope to the context of the BBC Hardtalk show. The paper also adopts the descriptive approach in its analysis and this has helped in describing how the conversational maxims are flouted in the Host-guests conversations. The findings of this study show that in Hardtalk interviews, maxims are flouted deliberately by the guests so as to avoid giving clear explanations to some questions. As the host and his guest’s converse, the guests most at times, flout either of the four maxims ranging from the maxim of quantity, quality, relation and the maxim of manner while the host does more of observing instances where the maxims are being flouted by the guests.
Keywords: Hardtalk, Implicature, Conversation, Speech Act, Descriptive Approach, Theory.
DOI: 10.36349/zamijoh.2025.v04i01.007
author/Bala, Y. & Kofar Kaura, H.A.
journal/Zamfara IJOH Vol. 4, Issue 1