In VCE English Language, the function of a text refers to its primary reason for existence—the “job” it is doing. While a text often has one primary function, it frequently serves multiple secondary functions simultaneously. In informal contexts, the functions of language often shift away from purely conveying information toward building social bonds.
It is critical to distinguish between the function of a text and its social purpose.
| Term | Focus | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Function | What the language is doing | Giving instructions on how to bake a cake. |
| Social Purpose | Why the speaker/writer is behaving this way | To establish expertise while remaining friendly and approachable. |
VCAA FOCUS: In the exam, you are often asked to identify the “social purpose” of an informal text. While “to inform” might be a function, “to reinforce in-group solidarity through shared slang” is a more sophisticated analysis of social purpose.
Linguists (notably Roman Jakobson) identify several core functions that language serves depending on the context.
The most common function in formal writing, but also present in informal speech. It focuses on the context or the “outside world.”
* Goal: To convey information, facts, or descriptions.
* Informal Example: “The party starts at 8 PM at Dave’s place.”
Focuses on the addresser (the speaker/writer).
* Goal: To express the speaker’s feelings, emotions, or attitudes.
* Informal Example: “I am absolutely stoked about the concert tonight!”
* Features: Interjections, expletives, emotive adjectives, and intensified prosody.
Focuses on the addressee (the listener/reader).
* Goal: To persuade, command, or influence the behavior of others.
* Informal Example: “Hey, pass the salt, would ya?”
* Features: Imperatives, vocatives, and interrogatives.
Focuses on the channel of communication.
* Goal: To establish, maintain, or close a social relationship. This is often called “small talk” or “social glue.”
* Informal Example: “How’s it going?” or “Nice weather, isn’t it?”
* Significance: In informal discourse, the phatic function is often more important than the information being exchanged.
Focuses on the message itself and its aesthetic or creative qualities.
* Goal: To entertain, play with sounds, or use language creatively.
* Informal Example: Using puns, rhyming slang, or creative insults (“He’s a few kangaroos short of a paddock”).
KEY TAKEAWAY: Most texts are multi-functional. A text might be primarily referential (giving directions) but use phatic language (“Cheers mate”) to maintain a positive relationship.
In Unit 3, Area of Study 1, the focus is on how informal language meets specific social needs.
Informal language reduces the social distance between participants.
* Features: Diminutives (barbie for barbecue), nicknames, and personal disclosures.
* Effect: Creates a sense of warmth and “closeness.”
Language acts as a “badge” of identity. Using specific slang or jargon signals that you belong to a particular group.
* Features: Slang (yeet, sus), ethnolect features, or “inside jokes.”
* Effect: Includes those who know the code and excludes those who don’t.
Informal contexts allow for “play.” New words (neologisms) and creative syntax often emerge in informal speech and digital “chat.”
* Features: Shortenings, blends, and creative metaphors.
EXAM TIP: When discussing function in an Analytical Commentary, always link the linguistic feature to the function.
Example: “The speaker uses the diminutive ‘preggo’ (Lexicology), which serves the social purpose of building rapport and reducing social distance through informal, colloquial language.”
The function of language is never static; it is determined by the Situational Context.
$$Function = f(Field, Mode, Setting, Relationship)$$
The values, attitudes, and beliefs of the wider community. In Australia, the cultural value of egalitarianism (the “fair go”) often leads to a preference for informal, phatic functions even in semi-formal settings to “level the playing field.”
COMMON MISTAKE: Students often describe a text as having only one function (e.g., “The function is to inform”). In VCE English Language, you must look for the nuance. A text might inform the reader about a product while simultaneously trying to build a “brand-to-consumer” rapport through informal, slangy language.
| Function | Primary Focus | Common Informal Features |
|---|---|---|
| Phatic | Social Bond | Greetings, weather talk, “How ya goin?” |
| Expressive | Speaker’s feelings | Expletives, intensifiers (so, totally), interjections. |
| Referential | Information | Simple declarative sentences, deictic expressions (over there). |
| Ludic | Playfulness | Puns, slang, creative nicknames, irony. |
| Conative | Influencing others | Interrogative tags (…, don’t you think?), soft imperatives. |
STUDY HINT: To practice, take a transcript of a casual conversation and highlight different sections in different colors based on their function. You will likely see the conversation “ping-pong” between phatic, referential, and expressive functions constantly.