Compliment response strategies among undergraduate students in Malaysia

Manuscript ID: 2125-0424-2188
Vol.: 1 Issue: 1 Pages: 54-62 May - 2025 Subject: Social Sciences Language: English
ISSN: 3068-1995 Online ISSN: 3068-109X
Keywords
compliment responses pragmatic competence intercultural communication speech acts
Abstract

This study investigates the compliment response strategies employed by undergraduate students in Malaysia, with particular attention to how social variables—especially status relationships between the compliment giver and receiver—influence the choice of response strategies. It also explores both cross-cultural and intra-cultural variations in these responses. A Discourse Completion Task (DCT) questionnaire was administered to 150 first-semester undergraduate students enrolled at a private university in Perak, Malaysia. The collected data were systematically categorized into 11 overarching response strategies, following established pragmatic analysis frameworks, and subsequently subjected to quantitative analysis. The findings reveal nuanced patterns in how Malaysian undergraduates respond to compliments, highlighting a general preference for acceptance strategies. However, notable variations emerged depending on whether the compliment was given by a peer or an authority figure, suggesting that status differentials play a critical role in shaping response behavior. These results deepen our understanding of pragmatic competence within the Malaysian higher education context and provide valuable implications for language educators, intercultural communication trainers, and curriculum developers aiming to enhance students’ sociolinguistic and pragmatic awareness in multicultural settings. Ultimately, the study contributes to broader discussions on politeness, face-saving strategies, and identity negotiation in multilingual, multiethnic societies.

Copyright & License

Copyright © 2025 Authors retain the copyright of this article. This article is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Cite this Article

Dr. Nirumala Rothinam (2025). Compliment response strategies among undergraduate students in Malaysia. International Journal of Technology & Emerging Research (IJTER), 1(1), 54-62

BibTeX
                                                @article{ijter2025212504242188,
  author = {Dr. Nirumala Rothinam},
  title = {Compliment response strategies among undergraduate students in Malaysia},
  journal = {International Journal of Technology &  Emerging Research },
  year = {2025},
  volume = {1},
  number = {1},
  pages = {54-62},
  issn = {3068-109X},
  url = {https://www.ijter.org/article/212504242188/compliment-response-strategies-among-undergraduate-students-in-malaysia},
  abstract = {This study investigates the compliment response strategies employed by undergraduate students in Malaysia, with particular attention to how social variables—especially status relationships between the compliment giver and receiver—influence the choice of response strategies. It also explores both cross-cultural and intra-cultural variations in these responses. A Discourse Completion Task (DCT) questionnaire was administered to 150 first-semester undergraduate students enrolled at a private university in Perak, Malaysia. The collected data were systematically categorized into 11 overarching response strategies, following established pragmatic analysis frameworks, and subsequently subjected to quantitative analysis. The findings reveal nuanced patterns in how Malaysian undergraduates respond to compliments, highlighting a general preference for acceptance strategies. However, notable variations emerged depending on whether the compliment was given by a peer or an authority figure, suggesting that status differentials play a critical role in shaping response behavior. These results deepen our understanding of pragmatic competence within the Malaysian higher education context and provide valuable implications for language educators, intercultural communication trainers, and curriculum developers aiming to enhance students’ sociolinguistic and pragmatic awareness in multicultural settings. Ultimately, the study contributes to broader discussions on politeness, face-saving strategies, and identity negotiation in multilingual, multiethnic societies.},
  keywords = {compliment responses, pragmatic competence, intercultural communication, speech acts},
  month = {May},
}