Formal texts are shaped by exactly the same contextual variables as informal ones — register, tenor and audience — but these variables take on distinct values that produce the characteristics we associate with formality.
Register is the variety of language selected to suit a particular situation, determined by field, tenor and mode. In formal contexts:
| Variable | Formal Tendency |
|---|---|
| Field | Often specialised or technical; subject matter is significant or public-facing |
| Tenor | Social distance between participants; unequal or professional relationship |
| Mode | Often written; if spoken, typically planned and rehearsed |
The register of a formal text tends to be:
- Lexically dense: many content words per clause; technical or Latinate vocabulary
- Syntactically complex: subordination, embedding, complex noun phrases
- Explicit: does not assume shared context; all information is spelled out
- Edited: formal written texts have been reviewed; formal speeches may be scripted
KEY TAKEAWAY: Formal register is not a natural state — it is a deliberate construction that requires effort, planning and access to the norms of the relevant discourse community. This is what makes it a marker of education and social power.
Tenor in formal contexts is typically:
- Unequal or asymmetrical: one participant holds more power, expertise or authority
- Distant or professional: the relationship is defined by role, not personal history
- Reserved: emotional expression is minimised or managed
Formal tenor is constructed through:
| Linguistic Feature | How it signals formal tenor |
|---|---|
| Titles and honorifics | Dr Smith, Your Honour, Minister |
| Third-person reference | The committee has determined… rather than We decided… |
| Passive voice | It has been decided… (removes personal agent) |
| Formal address | Dear Mr Henderson, rather than Hi James, |
| Lexical formality | commence not start, request not ask, endeavour not try |
| Hedging language | It would appear…, It is suggested that… |
EXAM TIP: When you identify formal tenor, always explain what the power relationship is between participants, and then link that to specific linguistic features that construct or reinforce it. The choice of passive voice in mistakes were made is a powerful example — it removes agency and accountability while maintaining formal tone.
In formal contexts, the audience is often:
- Unknown or large: the speaker/writer may not know the individuals in the audience
- Diverse: the text must be comprehensible without assumed shared context
- Critically attentive: formal audiences evaluate the text for accuracy, appropriateness and authority
This means formal texts must be:
- More explicit: less reliance on shared knowledge means more information must be stated directly
- More carefully constructed: word choice, structure and argument must withstand scrutiny
- More hedged (in some contexts): academic and legal language uses hedging to be precise about certainty
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes assume formal texts are simply “polite.” Many formal texts are not personally warm at all — they are calibrated to project authority and precision. The formal doctor’s report, the legal judgment and the government policy document serve very different purposes but all use formal register to project expertise and credibility.
Consider a formal speech by a chief executive at a company annual general meeting:
- Field: corporate performance, financial results (technical field → technical lexis)
- Tenor: speaker has authority; audience is stakeholders (unequal) but speaker needs their confidence (somewhat deferential)
- Mode: formal spoken, scripted and rehearsed (→ features of planned speech: no filled pauses, organised structure)
- Audience: shareholders, investors, media — scrutinising, large, diverse
These variables combine to produce: formal lexis, hedged claims (we anticipate), passive constructions, organised rhetorical structure, titles and formal address.
APPLICATION: When analysing a formal text, always begin with context. Identify the field, tenor relationship and mode before moving to language features. Then show how the language features are a response to those contextual conditions.
Register sits on a continuum. Many real texts blend formal and informal features:
- A TED talk uses formal structure but conversational asides
- A doctor’s appointment uses formal medical lexis but informal tenor with a trusted GP
- A funeral eulogy uses formal occasion but personal and emotional language
These hybrid registers are interesting for analysis because they reveal the tension between contextual demands.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA questions frequently require comparison of formal and informal texts. Practise identifying how the same contextual variable (e.g. a shift in tenor) produces different language choices in formal vs informal settings. This comparative analysis is a core exam skill.