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On the Vagaries of American English

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Talk and interact with L2 speakers, cook together, talk about motorcycles, etc. ... on the WTO, UN, and WHO, and may even aspire to become a CEO and own a BMW. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: On the Vagaries of American English


1
On the Vagaries of American English
  • Johanna E. Katchen (???)National Tsing Hua
    University
  • (?????????)katchen_at_mx.nthu.edu.tw
  • http//mx.nthu.edu.tw/katchen/

2
The Teachers Role
  • We teach General American English, but we cannot
    teach everything
  • We teach grammar but speakers sometimes speak
    ungrammatically
  • New vocabulary comes into a language every day
  • Best we can do is teach strategies for coping

3
New Concepts, New Words
  • English has more than three times as many words
    as most other languages
  • Synonyms for many shades of meaning
  • Prostitute is a general term for the occupation.
    What about call girl (high class, expensive),
    hooker (Neg. low class, solicits publicly or in
    red light district), whore (Neg. sex with many,
    maybe for money)
  • Male prostitute, gigolo for males

4
Sources of Vocabulary
  • Our most common words are from Germanic family
    members, numbers, body parts, ordinary nouns
    (e.g., door, water) and verbs (e.g., eat, drink,
    sleep)
  • The grammar of English is also Germanic
  • Almost all functions words (pronouns,
    auxiliaries, conjunctions, adverbs) are Germanic

5
  • English has borrowed from the Scandinavian
    languages (the Viking Age) common words like
    window, sky, skin, anger, take, give
  • As a result of the Norman Conquest, English
    borrowed from French words from many fields, from
    law (e.g., arson, adultery, coroner) through
    fashion (e.g., blue, sapphire, veil)

6
  • Blame the French for giving us totally different
    words for the meat on the table compared with the
    live animal, e.g., Germanic cow, swine, sheep,
    deer but from French beef, pork, mutton, venison
  • Baugh and Cable claim that as many as 10,000
    words entered English between 1066 and 1500, and
    about three-quarters of the words remain.

7
  • English has used Latin as a source al through its
    history, especially for more abstract terms.
  • Greek has been the basis for much scientific
    terminology (e.g., pneumonia, thermometer).
  • Other words from all over the world have become
    English words, among them in recent decades
    apartheid (Afrikaans, South Africa) and tsunami
    (Japanese).

8
  • When explorers going to new lands found new
    plants and animals and geographical features
  • Often they took the word the local people used
    and changed it to fit their own language, e.g.,
    guava, banana, kangaroo.
  • New cultural artifacts, such as American Indian
    wigwam, papoose.

9
  • The Christianization of England brought in
    hundreds of words from Latin, both for concrete
    (e.g., candle, chalice) and abstract (e.g.,
    creed) nouns and verbs such as pray
  • Also the formation of new words on native
    Germanic roots (e.g., gospel, Easter, Holy
    Ghost).

10
  • During the Renaissance, English borrowed Italian
    words for aspects of art, architecture and music.
  • More recently, wars and conflict have caused
    English to borrow words (e.g., burqa/burkha, an
    outer garment worn by Muslim women to cover the
    body completely) or make new words from
    native sources, (e.g., ethnic cleansing).

11
  • Peaks of technology contribute to growth of
    vocabulary, current computer and digital age,
    e.g., digit has been around for some time, but
    digital has just come into general use in the
    past few years with digital cameras
  • New words wi-fi, sim card, YouTube

12
  • When new names are created, ordinary spaces
    between words may be eliminated PowerPoint,
    FrontPage, YouTube.
  • Change the category of a word the company
    Google, now the verb to google, meaning to use
    Google to search for a person or thing.

13
Additional Meanings
  • Words like cell and mobile have been in English
    with other meanings (e.g., skin cell, prison
    cell, upwardly mobile) for a long time, but now
    they also refer to phones.
  • Words like windows and mouse have become more
    common in their computer contexts than in their
    household contexts.

14
An Example of Additional Meanings
  • You have just arrived in the USA and are having a
    great time with your host family. The mother
    asks you to stop off on your way home to pick up
    two pounds of hamburger. Where would you go to
    complete this errand? Would you go to McDonalds
    or to a supermarket?

15
  • To many people hamburgers are sandwichesmeat
    with bread
  • To many housewives hamburgers mean just the
    cooked meat patties, and this is why supermarkets
    also sell hamburger bunsthe bread that goes
    around a hamburger.
  • Hamburger as a mass noun, as in two pounds of
    hamburger, refers to ground beef (in some
    varieties minced beef)

16
  • We usually tell students that dry and wet are
    antonyms
  • What about dry wine, dry toast, dry wit, and the
    idiom cut and dried?
  • One can have instead (as antonyms) sweet wine and
    buttered toast

17
  • A synonym for dry wit might be sardonic wit
  • Cut and dried may have described a stage in
    tobacco production (opposite of wet), but the
    total idiom means decided beforehand

18
Jargon
  • All languages have jargon specific to certain
    contexts.
  • English teachers talk about communicative
    competence, task-based instruction, the affective
    filter, i 1
  • Most of us are not familiar with specialized
    vocabulary outside our own professions and
    interests even in our first language,

19
  • We might pick up jargon of other fields through
    spouses and friendsor editing scientific English
    and teaching ESP.
  • We expand our vocabulary into these fields when
    we need it, and even just a basic foundation in a
    language allows us to add and use new vocabulary.

20
Examples of JargonHousehold Items
  • Do you know all these English words?
  • Screwdriver
  • Wrench
  • Pliers
  • Plunger
  • Wheelbarrow

21
  • Whats the difference between dough and batter?
  • Whats the difference between a spice and an
    herb?
  • When might you need to use a snake (its not the
    animal)?

22
Match the words with the food with which they are
most usually associated.
  • Colander a. cake batter
  • Strainer b. noodles
  • Spatula c. adding flour to dough or
  • batter
  • Wisk d. adding flour or corn starch to
  • hot liquid or beating
    eggs
  • Sifter e. lemons or oranges to make
  • juice

23
Kitchen Utensils
24
How do we learn these words in L1?
  • Boys learn from fathers, girls from mothers.
  • We learn these words in the old apprentice waywe
    watch and observe.
  • Eventually, we may be given some simple task and,
    if we show promise and have interest, we may
    become masters.

25
How do we learn these words in L2?
  • If one goes to France to study cooking, one works
    in the kitchen and hears the French of the
    kitchen.
  • Talk and interact with L2 speakers, cook
    together, talk about motorcycles, etc.
  • For the rest of us, specialized ELT dictionaries,
    often with pictures.

26
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27
Acronyms
  • Do you have ESP? To most Americans this means
    extra sensory perception, the ability to see or
    sense what is unseen to most people.
  • It is our acronym jargon that has ELT, ESL, EFL,
    EAP, GEPT, TOEIC and organizations like ETA,
    PALT, MELTA, FEELTA

28
  • The English language is full of acronyms, with
    more coming in every day.
  • In Taiwan even those with minimal English know
    USA, IBM, MIT, and TSMC.
  • If they have an interest in politics or business,
    they may belong to the KMT or DPP and have
    discussions on the WTO, UN, and WHO, and may even
    aspire to become a CEO and own a BMW.

29
  • If they have cable TV, Papa may watch an NBA game
    on ESPN, followed by the news on CNN
  • Junior watches CSI on AXN and then MTV
  • Mama likes to watch movies on HBO
  • If all that is boring, they can watch a DVD.

30
  • Computer users worry about the cost of ADSL and
    whether they have enough CPU.
  • Teachers worry about the latest decision of the
    MOE while their students have sleepless nights
    over the TOEFL.
  • What is a CD? If you listen to music, it is a
    compact disk, but if you are an investor, it is a
    certificate of deposit.

31
Acronym Jargon
  • As with jargon, each profession or area of
    interest has its acronyms.
  • We may know IAEA (International Atomic Energy
    Agency)
  • Many of the general guidelines it follows were
    formulated by IRPA (the International Radiation
    Protection Association)

32
  • Most of us are not familiar with the acronym IRPA
    or other from the field
  • When new nuclear facilities are built, in order
    to minimize the potential danger to the public,
    they calculate radiation dose rates following the
    ALARA principle (as low as reasonably
    achievable).
  • As with other jargon, we learn it when we need it.

33
Words from Immigrant GroupsFood Words
  • What kind of cheese goes on pizza?
  • What kind goes on pasta dishes (spaghetti)?
  • Whats the difference among these kinds of pasta
    spaghetti, fettucini, macaroni, penne, and
    rotini?
  • You go to the market or a restaurant, see
    something new, try it and find out.

34
  • Italian food has been popular in the USA, so many
    food terms are used, such as words for many kinds
    of cheeses, pasta, salamiand coffee.
  • Thanks to the marketing of Starbucks and their
    competitors, terms like expresso, capucchino, and
    latte have spread around the world. And we all
    know pizza and lasagne.

35
  • Often food words are also regional.
  • For example, in the US South one is more likely
    to find various sorts of Mexican food on offer,
    as well as more Spanish words for all sorts of
    things.
  • The greater the number of people who speak a
    language in a region, the more likely their words
    will come into more general use.
  • Mexican restaurants (many not all that authentic)
    can be found all over the US, and virtually all
    Americans know what burritos, tacos, nachos, and
    enchiladas are.

36
  • In Pennsylvania nearly everyone is familiar with
    halupkies (ground beef/pork with rice and spices
    wrapped in cabbage leaves and steamed in tomato
    sauce)
  • We also know pierogies (similar to Chinese
    dumplings but filled most often with mashed
    potatoes or grated cabbage and then heated with
    butter and fried onions)
  • We even have pierogi/pirohy sales at the local
    church on Fridays.

37
  • In other regions of the USA as well as in other
    parts of the world, one would find different
    combinations of foods, both indigenous and from
    immigrant groups.
  • You might find sushi, tiramisu, tofu, moussaka,
    baklava, feta, hommus, tabbouli, kolbasa,
    knockwurst, sauerkraut, jambalaya

38
Levels of Formality
  • All languages can express ranges of formality.
  • In Chinese, saying????is more polite that saying
    ???.
  • English has a rest room where one doesnt rest, a
    bathroom where one does not always take a bath,
    and the more direct but slightly less polite
    toilet, which can also refer to the fixture
    itself.

39
  • There are additional terms appropriate for
    medical usage to the doctor or in polite company
    one talks about a bowel movement
  • The toddler makes poo poo or kaka in primary
    school the process may be called Number Two
  • The working class man takes a shit

40
Taboo and Euphemism
  • All languages have their taboo words.
  • For English one must be careful with words for
    sexual activities, toilet activities, and aspects
    of religion.
  • The most vulgar words in the language, those used
    for cursing, or swearing oaths in the case of
    religion, come from these three areas.

41
  • Death is another area which, though not actually
    being taboo, often requires politeness to
    grieving relatives.
  • Ordinarily, we might mention that someone died,
    but in newspaper obituaries we read that Mrs.
    Smith passed away and is referred to as the
    deceased.
  • Instead of bury, we may read laid to rest.

42
  • Coffin, a simple box, is replaced by casket, a
    more elegant and more expensive box.
  • Perhaps in order to mock death, people have made
    up all sorts of idioms for to die (e.g., kick the
    bucket, bite the dust) or be dead (e.g., pushing
    up daisies, six feet under).

43
Idiomatic Expressions
  • Idiomatic expressions have more uses than just
    euphemism.
  • Some may be proverbs or famous quotations Let
    sleeping dogs lie A fool and his money are soon
    parted.
  • There are so many possibilities and so many books
    explaining idioms already written.
  • These expressions are also among the most
    creative and amusing aspects of a language.

44
Example describing someone not very intelligent
  • At the beginning of the first Shrek movie, there
    is a song, and within the song we hear aint the
    brightest light on the Christmas tree, aint the
    sharpest knife in the drawer.
  • Both bright and sharp can mean intelligent, and
    the idioms work on the double meanings.

45
  • Other idioms refer to something lacking two
    sandwiches short of a picnic nobody home
    upstairs
  • A crazy person might be described as nuts, not
    all there, got a screw loose.
  • Someone who is drunk might be described thus
    hes three sheets to the wind, he tied one on, he
    got a snoot full.

46
Variation in Pronunciation
  • Taiwan students have difficulty understanding
    spoken English because they learn how to
    pronounce individual words
  • They have little practice listening to how
    ordinary peoplenot the careful speakers making
    ELT materialselide their speech in ordinary
    conversation.
  • Elision often happens with auxiliary words, which
    are often contracted even in more careful speech.

47
  • dincha didn't you Dincha ever hear that one
    before?
  • hafta have to I hafta get up town ta play da
    number before 7 o'clock!
  • gonna going to Youre gonna get it!
  • We also hear amina I am going to kupula a
    couple of and even some more idiosyncratic
    elisions like gradz garage.

48
  • Many speakers of English who use nonstandard
    varieties may not pronounce th but instead use
    t and d and in I tink so, dis an dat.
  • Final consonants or consonant clusters may be
    eliminated or reduced, fast becoming fas.
  • Regional accents can, of course, cause
    difficulties, especially if the persons accent
    is rather strong.

49
  • Most educated speakers switch their regional
    accent to something closer to Standard English
    when speaking to people from outside their region
    or when speaking in contexts where their regional
    accent would be less appropriate.
  • Our students are more likely to encounter
    speakers who speak in a more standard way
  • An exchange student may hear more Standard
    English from his teachers but hear something
    incomprehensible from cafeteria staff.

50
  • Stress and intonation can also contribute to
    comprehension problems.
  • In the American South the stress on the word
    police may be put on the first syllable.
  • We are taught that the tone of a declarative
    sentence should drop
  • at the end, and yet the feature of rising
    intonation continues to spread.

51
  • In some areas, pitch range is narrower, giving an
    almost monotone effect, while in other areas
    pitch range is broader and sounds more musical.
  • Example from Eastern Pennsylvania
  • Notice the non-standard pronunciation,
    intonation, acronyms, idiomatic expressions, etc.

52
Non-standard Grammar
  • While we so not want to teach students to use
    nonstandard grammar, they will encounter it and
    should recognize it.
  • Some common nonstandard features include the use
    of the participial form for the past tense I
    seen it He done it
  • The use of double negatives I dont want none.

53
  • What is the plural form of you?
  • a. You
  • b. Yuns
  • c. Youz
  • d. Yall
  • e. You lot

54
  • Not all use of nonstandard grammar is a mistake
    of a mark of an uneducated speaker.
  • A wise salesman speaks like his customers, like
    one of us.
  • Standard language is not always appropriate when
    one is with classmates or family.

55
  • However, if one speaks only a nonstandard
    variety, he may have trouble communicating
    outside his groups of nonstandard speakers

56
Language Learning is Messy!
  • Lots of vocabulary from historical and cultural
    sources.
  • Lots of variation in vocabulary usage, multiple
    meanings of words and phrases
  • Use of nonstandard forms
  • It is not possible to teach everything
  • Students will have to learn on their own to
    fulfill their needs
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