
The English Word Require: Its Meaning, Use, and Ideology
Author(s) -
Ratna Anugrah Setyarini Utami
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
indonesian journal of english language studies/indonesian journal of english language studies (ijels)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2715-0895
pISSN - 2442-790X
DOI - 10.24071/ijels.v2i2.554
Subject(s) - meaning (existential) , sentence , ideology , phrase , linguistics , verb , word (group theory) , obligation , verb phrase , computer science , psychology , political science , law , philosophy , politics , noun phrase , noun , psychotherapist
The current study attempts to investigate the use and the meaning of the word require. This study also tries to find the ideology of the word require in the sentences or phrases. The data of the current study are derived through website Corpus of American Contemporary English. There are 100 data used for this research. The word require functions as a verb in every sentence or phrase. All sentences or phrases which use the word require are analyzed to find the meaning of the word require. The findings show that the word require has four meanings: to have as a requisite or necessity; to stipulate as obligatory by the authority; to demand as obligatory or appropriateness; and to impose an obligation. The most frequent meaning occurs in the data is 39 % of which to have as a requisite or necessity. The rest is 38% of which to demand as obligatory or appropriateness; 14% of which to stipulate as obligatory by the authority; and only 9% of which to impose an obligation. The ideology of the word require is that the authority of institution has more power and people are powerless.Keywords: use, meaning, function, word, to require, ideology.