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Language in Society

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Pidgins may be rudimentary, but are not devoid of grammar ... Pidgins are not 'baby talk' or Hollywood's version of American Indians talking English. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Language in Society


1
Language in Society
  • Chapter 10. Fromkin, Rodman Hyams (2003)
  • Introduction to Language

2
Dialects in General
3
Dialects
  • Idiolect
  • The unique characteristics of the language of an
    individual speaker
  • English may be said to consist of more than
    450,000,000 idiolects, or the number equal to the
    number of speakers of English
  • Dialect
  • There are systematic differences in the way
    different groups speak a language
  • Mutually intelligible forms of a language
  • Mutual intelligibility The situation that holds
    between two varieties of a language when speakers
    of either one are able to understand the other. A
    criterion to decide whether the two dialects are
    the same language or not
  • A dialect is not an inferior or degraded form of
    a language ? a language is a collection of
    dialects.

4
(cntd.)
  • When dialects become mutually unintelligible ?
    these dialects become different languages
  • The speakers of one dialect group can no longer
    understand the speakers of another dialect group
  • But mutual intelligibility is hard to define
  • People speaking different languages (Swedish,
    Danish, or Norwegian) converse with each other.
  • Mandarin Cantonese are mutually unintelligible
    but have been referred to as dialects of Chinese.
  • Spoken within a single country
  • Sharing a writing system
  • Neither mutual intelligibility nor the existence
    of political boundaries is decisive
  • ? No clear-cut distinction between language and
    dialects

5
Regional Dialects
  • Dialect levelling
  • Movement toward greater uniformity and less
    variation among dialects.
  • Mass media influence
  • However, dialect variation in UK is maintained
    despite a few major dialects broadcast
  • Grammar changes
  • Do not take place all at once but gradually in a
    speech community
  • Communicative isolation
  • A dialect user is much less likely to talk to
    speakers of other dialects.
  • Why dialect differences occur?
  • Language changes occur in one region and fails to
    spread to other regions of the language
    community.
  • ? Regional dialect

6
Accents
  • Regional phonological or phonetic distinctions
  • Characteristics of speech that convey information
    about the speakers dialect
  • Revealing speaker information
  • country or part of the country the speaker grew
    up in
  • sociolinguistic group the speaker belongs to
  • Examples
  • Boston accent, a southern accent, a Brooklyn
    accent, a midwestern accent
  • British accent (in US), American accent (in UK)

7
Dialects of English
8
Regional Dialects of English
  • British English
  • Every other dialects in every other areas
  • American English
  • The 1st colonies as British dialects
  • 3 major dialects by the time of the American
    Revolution
  • Northern dialect new England, Hudson river
  • Midland dialect Pennsylvania
  • Southern dialect

9
Phonological Differences
  • r-less (r-dropping) before C, word finally
  • Southern England, 18c
  • New England, by the end of 18c
  • Presently maintained in Boston, New York, and
    Savannah
  • r-coloring influenced by immigrants from Northern
    England
  • caught/k
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