THE ROLE OF PHONOPRAGMATICS IN ENHANCING EFFECTIVENESS OF BATTLE MANAGEMENT LANGUAGE: EVIDENCE FROM ENGLISH AND UZBEK MILITARY DISCOURSE
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Modern American Journals
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This study explores the role of phonopragmatics in enhancing the effectiveness of battle management language, based on comparative analysis of English and Uzbek military discourse. Phonopragmatics is approached as the interaction between prosodic features – intonation, stress, rhythm, and tempo – and pragmatic force in high-stakes communication. The research examines how phonetic structuring contributes to clarity, authority, urgency, and unambiguous command transmission in operational contexts. The findings indicate that in both English and Uzbek military communication, prosodic compression, terminal falling tones, rhythmic regularity, and focal stress function as strategic markers of directive force and hierarchical control. Despite typological differences between the two languages, similar phonopragmatic mechanisms are employed to minimize ambiguity and maximize efficiency under conditions of time pressure and risk. The study argues that phonopragmatic competence is a crucial component of professional military communication and should be incorporated into specialized language training frameworks.