Maxim of Quantity in the Police Officers Speech Acts: (An
Ethnography of Communication)
Ni Wayan Ayu Permata Sari
1
, Zuriyati
2
, Yumna Rasyid
2
1
Doctoral Student of Language Education Study, Universitas Negeri Jakarta, Jl. Rawamangun Muka, Jakarta, Indonesia
2
Lecturer at the Language Education Study, Graduate Program of Universitas Negeri Jakarta, Jl. Rawamangun Muka,
Jakarta, Indonesia
Keywords: The Principle of Cooperation, Speech Acts, Police, SPKT, Community, Polres Depok
Abstract: This research is motivated by the authors' interest in the phenomenon that arises regarding speech acts.
Humans in this millennial era more often feel that the speech acts spoken between the speaker and the
speech partner are inaccurate or inappropriate, causing misperceptions. That of course has an impact on the
social relations of the speaker and the speech partner. Therefore, the principle of cooperation exists to see
the extent of the discrepancy of speech acts between the speaker and the speech partner. The principle of
cooperation has four maxims namely the maxim of quantity, quality, relevance, and manner. The focus of
this research was the principle of cooperation with the maxim of quantity in the speech acts between the
Integrated Police Service Center (SPKT) officers and the society. The object of this study was the SPKT
Police officers in Depok with the society who reported all their problems. This research applied an
ethnographic approach. The results of this study obtained as many as 31 maxims of quantity, both spoken by
the police and the society.
1 INTRODUCTION
Speech acts that occur in humans are proof that
humans are social creatures. In essence, social
beings always communicate both verbally and in
writing, directly or indirectly. Speech acts are used
by humans in various social interests, such as:
debating, discussing, negotiating, arguing, etc.
Humans carry out actions and actions using speech
or utterance. This is as stated (Shams & Afghari,
2011) in the International Journal on English
Language Teaching Published by the Canadian
Center of Science and Education which confirms
that people take action using speech or utterance.
Shams & Afghari (2011) said, "People don't produce
the grammatical utterances and words merely to
express themselves; they perform actions via these
utterances".
Mistakes in speech acts will naturally lead to
misunderstandings and quarrels between the speaker
and the speech partner. The impact of speech acts is
a fatal problem and has a direct impact on the social
sustainability of speakers and speech partners.
To create a good speech act, the principle of
cooperation is very necessary in its application. The
cooperative principle theory that is always used by
researchers is the principle of Grice's cooperation.
The maxim contained therein is the maxim of
quantity, the maxim of quality, the maxim of
relevance or relationship, and the maxim of manner.
However, this research is limited to the maxim of
quantity in the speech act of the Integrated Police
Service Center officers at Depok Police Station.
Ethnography of Communication Analysis used is
(Jonz & Saville-Troike, 1984) model which is then
combined with ethnographic analysis of cultural
themes, (Spradley, 1980) to see the cultural aspects
of the maxim of quantity on the principle of
cooperation in speech acts.
344
Permata Sari, N., Zuriyati, . and Rasyid, Y.
Maxim of Quantity in the Police Officers’ Speech Acts: An Ethnography of Communication.
DOI: 10.5220/0008998703440348
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Education, Language and Society (ICELS 2019), pages 344-348
ISBN: 978-989-758-405-3
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Cooperative principle
The principle of cooperation is one of the principles
needed to more easily explain the relationship
between meaning and power, and to assist in solving
problems that arise in semantics using a truth-based
approach.
Make your conversational contributions such as
is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the
accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in
which you are engaged (Grice, 1989). Susanti (2016)
further stated that in the principle of cooperation try
to make our contribution in the conversation as
needed, with the aim or direction of the conversation
that is acceptable in the current discussion situation.
Grice stated that in order to carry out the
principle of cooperation, every speaker must obey
the 4 maxims of conversation "(Wijana & Rohmadi,
2010). Similarly, as expressed by Djajasudarma
(2012) Conversation has a rule called maxims.
Djajasudarma (2012) also states "Some of the
conditions that are considered as language integrity
in conversations are: (1) honesty in the use of
language, (2) having facts about what is said, and (3)
making what is said relevant to the context of
speech". The principle of cooperation is broken
down into four maxims, as suggested by Grice
(1981).
Herbert Paul Grice divides this principle into
four types of maxims, which include.
a. Maxim of Quantity
Provide the right amount of information, i.e.
1. Your information contribution must be as
informative as needed.
2. Your information contribution do not to exceed
what is needed.
b. Maxim of Quality
Try to make your information contribution correct,
namely:
1. Don't say something that you believe is not true.
2. Do not say something that is not convincing
proof of truth.
c. Maxim of Relation
Try to make your words relevant.
d. Maxim of Manner
Try to be easy to understand, namely:
1) Avoid vague statements.
2) Avoid circumcision.
3) Keep it concise (avoid long-winded statements)
4) Try to speak regularly (Leech, 1983).
2.2 Speech acts
Speech acts are part of the speech event and the
speech event is part of the speech situation. Every
speech event is limited to activities or aspects of
activities that are directly governed by rules or
norms for speakers. Utterance or speech act can
consist of one or more speech acts in a speech event
and speech situation (Putrayasa, 2014).
Speech actions are individual symptoms, are
psychological, and are determined by the speaker's
language ability in dealing with certain situations.
Speech act emphasizes the meaning or meaning of
the act, while the speech event emphasizes the
purpose of the event (Suwito, 1983).
Speech act is a communication that is built
through the construction of facts and events, which
is usually done by humans in their respective lives
(Wibowo, 2016). Whereas Mulyana stated that
speech act is a function of language as a means of
action (Mulyana, 2005). All sentences or utterances
spoken by the speaker actually contain certain
communication functions. That is, the speech of a
speaker of course is not merely just talking, but it
contains a specific purpose. Every utterance spoken
by the speaker has a specific communication
purpose and function which is to be conveyed to the
interlocutor in the hope of understanding each other.
Searle in Kasher (1998) suggests that
pragmatically there are at least three types of actions
that can be realized by a speaker, namely locutionary
act, illocutionary act, and act of perlocutionary act.
Locutionary acts can take the form of questions,
statements or instructions. Illocutionary speech acts
are speech acts to inform something and instruct the
speech partners to do something, while speech acts
of perlocutionary are effects or results caused by the
speech to the speech partners. The speech partner
implements what the speaker wants.
A speech besides functions to say or inform
something, can also be used to do something. How
this can happen, speech acts that are formed are
illocutionary acts of speech. The illocutionary act is
called The Act of Doing Something (Rahardi, 2009;
Sumarsono, 2009). Illocutionary action is what will
be achieved by the speaker when saying something
and can be an act of expressing, promising,
apologizing, threatening, predicting, commanding,
asking, etc.
2.3 Ethnography of Communication
This research was conducted with a qualitative
approach. This research is also based on social and
Maxim of Quantity in the Police Officers’ Speech Acts: An Ethnography of Communication
345
cultural research both anthropologically and
sociologically. Specifically, this study concentrates
on ethnographic research. Ethnographic research has
an important role in the study of anthropology,
sociology, and linguistics.
Ethnographic research is more focused on the
viewpoints and patterns of community life and also
includes language behavior in communicating and
interacting, as well as the language system used. The
diversity of communication and communication
practices is an inseparable part of what we know and
do as members of a particular culture (Schiffrin,
1994: 137).
Hymes presents a SPEAKING method that can
be done by applying the concept of these
communication units as communication taxonomies,
as follows.
S (Setting, scene): time, place and other physical
conditions
P (Participants): psychological balance in
settings
E (Ends): purpose-output / purpose-goal
A (ActSequences): form and content of the
message
K (Keys): conversational, serious, or casual tone
I (Instrumentalities): channels, writing,
telegraphs, dialects, standard languages
N(Norms): interpretation norms/ interpretation
norms
G (Genre): stories, advertisements, etc.
Emzir (2013) asserts that ethnography is a
method of social science research. This research
strongly believes in up-close, personal experience,
and possible participation, not just observations by
researchers trained in the art of ethnography.
Ethnographic focal points include intensive study of
culture and language, intensive study of a single
field or domain, as well as a combination of
historical, observational, and interview methods.
Ethnographic research uses three types of data
collection, namely interviews, observation, and
documents. An interactional sociolinguistic
approach highlights the broader socio-cultural
context in which it takes place. However, this
approach pays special attention to linguistic and
non-linguistic instructions that explain how people
interpret conversation interactions in an
ethnographic context.
3 METHODS
This research is a qualitative research using
communication ethnography method. This means
collecting data, processing data, analyzing data, and
presenting data objectively about the maxim of the
quantity of the principle of cooperation in speech
acts at the police officers at the Integrated Police
Service Center. In qualitative research, researchers
are key instruments, therefore, researchers must
have a provision of theory and broad insight so that
they can prepare various questions, be able to
analyze and rebuild research objects so that they
become clearer. The ethnographic communication
method used serves to describe the maxim quantity
in SPKT police officers' speech patterns at Depok
Police Station.
Schiffrin argues that communication
ethnography is an approach to discourse based on
anthropology and linguistics. The concept of
ethnography is an empirical and theoretical approach
that aims to obtain in-depth descriptions and analysis
of culture based on intensive data in the field.
4 FINDINGS
The findings from the study of quantity maxim in
the speech act of the police officers at the Integrated
Police Service (SPKT) at Depok Police Station can
be explained as follows:
Table 1: The Speech Act of The Police Officers at The Integrated Police Service (SPKT)
NO
DATE
SPEECH ACTS TRANSCRIPTION
MAXIM OF QUANTITY
(PRINCIPLE OF
COOPERATION)
1.
22 January 2019
M: “Jadi sebenarnya masyarakat itu kalo mau apa-apa ke sini dulu ya
Pak," [So actually, if you want anything, come here first, sir]
P : "Iya" [Okay]
M: "Jadi bukan hanya di pos eee pos nya aja" [So it's not just the
police station]
P : “Pos nya mana maksudnya?” [Which post does it mean?]
M : “Pos depan itu Pak” [The post in front, sir]
P : “Kalo di sana paling nanya aja" [If you are there, just ask]
M : “Paling nanya he'eh [It’s only asking]
ICELS 2019 - International Conference on Education, Language, and Society
346
P: “Saya paling ndak perlu, ohh itu deh sebentar” [It is not necessary
to ..., hold on]
M : “Ohh”
2.
22 January 2019
M : "Iya, terus Saya mau lapor Pak kehilangan KTP misalnya di sini
SPK nya, Pak Saya kemarin kehilangan motor di parkir di sini juga
gitu" [Yes, then I want to report the loss of the ID card, for example
here the SPK. Sir, I lost my motorcycle yesterday in the parking lot
here too]
P : "Hmm"
3.
22 January 2019
P 1: "Tunggu nanya dulu, duduk Mas" [Just a second, ask first. Have a
sit, Sir]
P 2: "Duduk" [Have a sit]
P 1: " Silakan duduk, mau laporan apa?" [Just have a sit, what would
you like to report]
M: "Kehilangan buku kredit" [I lost my credit book]
P 1: "Buku tabungan" [Bank account book?]
M : "Heeh" [Yeah]
P 2: "Bank apa?" [What bank?]
M : "BRI"
P2:"BRI 124******64871**"
(Suara ketikan) [typing sounds]
P2: "Dari cabang mana ini?" [What branch of Bank?]
M: "Cabang dari di daerah Subang" [The branch of Subang]
P2: "Daerah Subang" [from Subang]
(Suara ketikan) [typing sounds]
P 2 : "KTP nya, tanda tangan di sini ya. Ini berlakunya 14 hari ya jadi
diurus cepet" [Your ID card, sign here. This is valid for 14 days, so be
taken care of quickly]
M : "14 hari" [fourteen days]
P 2 : "Iya" [Yes]
M : "Ini aja ya. Makasih ya" [Is it all? Thanks]
P 2 : "Iyaaa [Yes]
4.
22 January 2019
P: "Silakan mas. Mau laporan apa?" [Yes, please, Sir. What would you
like to report?]
M:"Laporan kehilangan ATM mba" [I’d like to report of my ATM lost,
Madem]
P: "ATM? Bukunya bawa?" [ATM? Do you bring the account book?]
M: "Buku apaan. Tabungan?" [What book, the Bank book?]
P: "Iya tabungan, sama KTP ya"
M: "Iya" [Yes, the book and your ID]
(Suara ketikan) [Typing sounds]
M: "Ini udah mba?" [Here you are]
(Heran) [surprised]
P: "Udah" [finished]
M: "Makasih mba" [Thanks, Madam]
P: "Iya" [Yes]
5.
P1: "Duduk" [Have a sit]
M : "BPKB saya kan hilang nih" [I’ve lost my BPKB]
P1: "He'eh" [aha]
M: "Terus mau bikin surat kehilangan BPKB nya itu syaratnya apa aja
ya" [So, I’d like to make the letter of lost]
P1:"Syaratnya banyak" [Some conditionals]
M: "He'eh. Tapi itu atas nama bapak saya" [Aha, but it’s on behalf of
my father]
P1:"Gak ada masalah" [No problem]
M : "Hmm terus ini kalo udah semua bawa ke sini lagi atau gimana?"
[So, after this, all these get to bring here again or what?]
P 2 : "Iya, dilengkapi dulu syaratnya" [Sure, make all the conditionals
complete first]
M : "He'eh" [Aha]
Maxim of Quantity in the Police Officers’ Speech Acts: An Ethnography of Communication
347
5 CONCLUSIONS
Based on the findings obtained, the conclusion in
this study is that there are 31 maxims of quantity
produced from the people's speech acts at the Depok
SPKT on January 22, 2019. Both the police and the
reporters use more speech acts that contain maxim
of quantity. The maxim of quantity is contained in
the Grice's cooperation principle. Maxim of quantity
is used more by the police officers to provide a brief
and understandable explanations for people who are
confused about the problems they are facing.
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