MORAES, E. R.; MORAES, Elaine Ribeiro de.
Resumen:
The bureaucratic-legal discourse still has obstacles arising from the conservative
approach of law professionals that favors the stilted and coded language as a means
to have good performance in judicial activity. Given this attitude, it is found
irreparable harm to the party, lay in law, and therefore to society. This present study
shows that the elaborate and complex legal language excludes citizens, other than
the right of the operator, the legal discourse. It is a form of monopoly of legal
knowledge that is not shared to curtail the power and authority conferred by this
knowledge. For this reason, there is abuse of the "juridequês" and reversing the
direct order, bringing errors and inadequacies that compromise text content. And
without understanding the content, it is hampered judicial provision and democracy.
Because, on the one hand citizens had no right to access to public, adequate and
complete information to make a decision; for another, the very right of the operator
did not understand the request or order, or judicial declaration part to act,
undermining the development process. Therefore, it is necessary to study the
grammar in order to relate to its use in the construction of communicative function of
the text, respecting the criteria of textuality (coherence, cohesion, acceptability,
situationality, intentionality, informativeness or intertextuality text). These are
requirements that ensure effective communication act, which is not the case in the
examples of legal discourse with the excessive use of technical terms, in the
vernacular or Latin; or convoluted terms, accompanied by a complex clausal
structure