Accent and Dialect
Giles' matched guise technique;
explored the feelings and judgements people had towards
others based on accent and discovered that the most respected accent in the UK was Received Pronunciation as it was viewed as the accent of an intellectual individual.
M.A.K. Halliday, A. McIntosh and P. Strevens;
discovered that more rural accents are viewed as more friendly and approachable than urban accents which are viewed in a more negative light. They also concluded that no dialect is linguistically 'better' than another and that judgements on both accents and dialects are decided upon socially.
Martha's Vineyard study by Labov;
explaining the Convergence and Divergence theory describes how a group of locals thickened their accents to seem different to the tourists who would visit to seem more distant from them
Dialect leveling;
The amount a person travels in their life is a key part in how they pronounce phrases, If someone travels a lot to places with strong accents they may pick up that accent and incorporate it into their own this is known as dialect leveling. This has been enhanced in recent years due to the ability to travel farther and much more easily around the world.
New York department store rhotic R research;
Labov studied people in department stores in New York it showed that speech patterns were something of a highly systematic structure of social/stylistic stratification. Labov studied how the letter 'r' is pronounced with a word and where it was placed in the word.The letter 'r' had only been reintroduced into the new york accent in 1960. He studied the language of employees in 3 different stores which were all different class. This was because he found that the pronunciation of 'r' occurred and its "frequent of use depended on the speakers’ membership to particular socioeconomic status" Findings: New York was found to be stratified in class, pronounciaion of the 'r' depended on their social status within the employees. People pronounced their 'r's more frequently if they were higher within their social class.
Gender & Power
Monday, 19 June 2017
Tuesday, 13 June 2017
CLA Paper 1
Stages of development
prelinguistic 0-4months - crying
cooing 4-7 months - small noises
babbling 6-12 months -repeating patterns of consonant and vowel sounds
one word/ holophrastic 12-18 months - one word utterances
two word 18-24 months - two word utterances
telegraphic 24-36 months - incomplete utterances of two or more words
post telegraphic 36months+ - more complex spoken sentences
Skinner
Operant conditioning- where the strength of a behavior is modified by the behavior's consequences, such as reward or punishment
Positive reinforcement- Receiving a reward for behaviour ,often praise is given to encourage the child to repeat their behaviour
Negative reinforcement- Negative reinforcement occurs when a certain stimulus (usually an aversive stimulus) is removed after a particular behavior is exhibited. The likelihood of the particular behavior occurring again in the future is increased because of removing/avoiding the negative consequence.
Punishment- Punishment is a process by which a consequence immediately follows a behavior which decreases the future frequency of that behavior
Chomsky
Nativist theory- Language is innate
LAD- language acquisition device
Universal gramar- a certain set of structural rules are innate to humans not learnt
key points:
Children do not simply copy the language that they hear around them. They deduce rules from it, which they can then use to produce sentences that they have never heard before.
Vygotski
ZPD- Zone of proximal development and CDS
CDS features;
- local topics
- child-led discourse
- turn taking
- higher pitch
- clearer pronunciation
- interrogatives
- reforming/echoing/recasting
Scaffolding-
More Knowledgeable Other- usually a teacher/ carer /adult who will offer help and support during scaffolding
Lenneburg
Critical period hypothesis- the subject of a long-standing debate in linguistics and language acquisition over the extent to which the ability to acquire language is biologically linked to age.
the case of Gene and other wild children support this theory
Bruner
LASS (language aquisition support system) - child directed speech
Believes children's cognitive function advances and improves with age and that children are naturally inquisitive and thirsty to learn.
Monday, 3 April 2017
World Englishes & Language Change . . .
Terminology
How coinages are formed- The word formation process where a new word is created either deliberately or accidentally without using the other word formation processes and often from seemingly nothing. As neologism or coinage, we identify the word formation process of inventing entirely new words
Back formation- A word that is formed from an existing word which looks as though it is a derivative, typically by removal of a suffix
Affixations- Grammar. the process of inflection or derivation that consists of adding an affix
Compounding- A word that consists of more than one stem, compounding occurs when two or more words are joined to make one longer word.
Conversion- A kind of word formation involving the creation of a word (of a new word class) from an existing word (of a different word class) without any change in form
Norm dependant- Population which fully depend on the norms originally produced by the native speakers of the inner circle. They generally do not develop or reproduce 'Englishes'.
Aboriginal- The name given to the various kinds of English spoken by Aboriginal people throughout Australia. Technically, the language varieties are dialects of English.
Blending- Joining the beginning of one word and the end of another to make a new word.
Acronym- First letters are taken from a series of words to create a new word.
Eponym- Names of a person or company are used to define particular objects.
Initialism- The first letters from a series of words to form a new word but each letter is pronounced.
Clipping- Words are shortened and the shortened from becomes the norm.
EL1- English language first, meaning the primary language spoken
ESL- English Second Language
EFL- English Foreign Language
Theories for world Englishes
Kachru's Circle of English 1992-
The inner circle
The inner circle is made up of countries who are considered the 'traditional bases' of English, such as the U.K., U.S.A, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and anglophone Canada. English in these countries are classed as a 'first' language.
Kachru labels the inner circle countries as 'norm-providing' - the norms of the English language are produced there.
The outer circle
The outer circle is comprised of countries where English is not spoken natively but is still maintained as an important language for communication. These countries include: India, Nigeria, the Phillippines, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Malaysia, Tanzania, Kenya, non-anglophone South Africa and Canada.
The outer circle
The outer circle is comprised of countries where English is not spoken natively but is still maintained as an important language for communication. These countries include: India, Nigeria, the Phillippines, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Malaysia, Tanzania, Kenya, non-anglophone South Africa and Canada.
Kachru labels these countries as 'norm-developing' - the norms produced by the inner circle are further developed and reproduced in the outer circle.
The expanding circle
The expanding circle includes much of the rest of the world's population - countries that do not hold historical or governmental importance towards English, but class it as a foreign language or lingua franca. Main examples of such countries include: most of Europe, China, Russia, Japan, Korea, Egypt and Indonesia.
The expanding circle
The expanding circle includes much of the rest of the world's population - countries that do not hold historical or governmental importance towards English, but class it as a foreign language or lingua franca. Main examples of such countries include: most of Europe, China, Russia, Japan, Korea, Egypt and Indonesia.
These countries are 'norm-dependent' - they fully depend on the norms originally produced by the native speakers of the inner circle. They generally do not develop or reproduce 'Englishes'.
Five underlying principals underscore the Dynamic Model
1) The closer the contact (language contact) higher the degree of billingualism, multilingualism in a community, the stronger the effects of contact
2) The structural effects of language contact depend on social conditions. Therefore, history will play an important part.
3) Contact-induced changes can be achieved by a variety of mechanisms, from code switching (occurs when a speaker alternates between two or more languages, or language varieties, in the context of a single conversation) to code alternation to acquisition strategies (language acquisition usually refers to first-language acquisition, which studies infants acquisition of their native language. This is distinguished from second language acquisition, which deals with the acquisition (in both children and adults) of additional languages).
4) Language evolution and the emergence of contact induced varieties can be regarded as speakers making selections from a pool of linguistic variants made available to them
5) Which features will be ultimately adopted depends on the complete 'ecology' of the contact situation, including factors such as demography, social relationships and surface similarities between languages
The Dynamic model outlines 5 major stages of the evolution of world englishes these stages will take perspectives from the two major parties of agents - settlers (STL) and indigenous residents (IDG)
Each stage is defined by four parameters:
1) Extra linguistic factors
2) Characteristic identity
3) Sociolinguistic determinants
4) Structural effects
Edgar Schneider's developmental stages for new varieties of English 2007-
Five underlying principals underscore the Dynamic Model
1) The closer the contact (language contact) higher the degree of billingualism, multilingualism in a community, the stronger the effects of contact
2) The structural effects of language contact depend on social conditions. Therefore, history will play an important part.
3) Contact-induced changes can be achieved by a variety of mechanisms, from code switching (occurs when a speaker alternates between two or more languages, or language varieties, in the context of a single conversation) to code alternation to acquisition strategies (language acquisition usually refers to first-language acquisition, which studies infants acquisition of their native language. This is distinguished from second language acquisition, which deals with the acquisition (in both children and adults) of additional languages).
4) Language evolution and the emergence of contact induced varieties can be regarded as speakers making selections from a pool of linguistic variants made available to them
5) Which features will be ultimately adopted depends on the complete 'ecology' of the contact situation, including factors such as demography, social relationships and surface similarities between languages
The Dynamic model outlines 5 major stages of the evolution of world englishes these stages will take perspectives from the two major parties of agents - settlers (STL) and indigenous residents (IDG)
Each stage is defined by four parameters:
1) Extra linguistic factors
2) Characteristic identity
3) Sociolinguistic determinants
4) Structural effects
Friday, 24 February 2017
Language change
Development and use of words:
pictures:
the showing of a film in a cinema; always with the and in plural (British usage). First cited 1915.
cinema:
short for cinema hall; a building in which films are shown. First cited 1914.
movies:
the screening of motion pictures in a cinema; always with the and in plural (originally North American usage). First cited 1914.
parlour:
main family living room or room reserved for entertaining guests; sitting room; ‘best’ room. First cited 1448.
drawing room:
room reserved for the reception of company and to which ladies withdraw from the dining room after dinner. First cited 1642.
sitting room:
room used for sitting in. First cited 1771.
living room:
room set aside for ordinary social use. First cited 1825.
lounge:the drawing room of a private house. First cited 1881.
front room:
a room situated at the front of a house, esp. a sitting-room kept as the ‘best’ room in the house. First cited 1922.
court:
to pay amorous attention to, to seek to gain the affections of, to woo (with a view to marriage); now only homely or poetic use. First cited 1580.
go out with:
go out with:
no entry in OED.
date:
date:
to make or have an arrangement to meet someone; specifically to do so in the context of romantic attachment (originally colloquial US usage). First cited 1902
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