Varieties of English - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

Varieties of English

Description:

Varieties of English Recurrent Concepts of English Language and Linguistics – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:974
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: NAE89
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Varieties of English


1
Varieties of English
  • Recurrent Concepts of English Language and
    Linguistics

2
Varieties of English
  • VARIATION Natural phenomenon
  • Language is a form of social behavior and
    communities tend to split up into groups, each
    displaying differences of behavior
  • Language manifests differences of behavior
  • Language is the variety of speakers
  • Speakers vary in their vocabulary and skills to
    use it
  • Linguistic variables have both social and style
    variation, some only social, but none style
    variation only

3
Dialect
  • No universally accepted criteria for
    distinguishing languages from dialects, although
    a number of paradigms exist, which render
    sometimes contradictory results
  • The exact distinction is a subjective one,
    dependent on the user's frame of reference
  • Language varieties are often called dialects
    rather than languages

4
Because
  • solely they are not, or not recognized as
    literary languages
  • the speakers of the given language do not have a
    state of their own
  • they are not used in press or literature, or very
    little.
  • because their language lacks prestige

5
Difference between Accent and Dialect
  • a variety of a language characteristic of a
    particular group of the language's speakers
  • applied most often to regional speech patterns,
    but a dialect may also be defined by other
    factors, such as social class
  • Defined as a sub-division of a language, used by
    a group of speakers who have some non-linguistic
    characteristics in common or the specific form of
    a language used by a speech community

6
Most common characteristics
  • The regional one
  • Link can also be occupational and social
  • Sometime variety depends upon the occasion to use
    as well
  • the word "dialect" is sometimes used to refer to
    a lesser-known language most commonly a regional
    language, especially one that is unwritten or not
    standardized

7
Difference between Language Dialect
  • often accompanied by the erroneous belief that
    the minority language is lacking in vocabulary,
    grammar, or importance
  • the difference between language and dialect is
    the difference between the abstract or general
    and the concrete and particular
  • Identifying a particular dialect as the
    "standard" or "proper" version of a language are
    in fact using these terms to express a social
    distinction

8
The status of language
  • the status of language is not solely determined
    by linguistic criteria, but it is also the result
    of a historical and political development
  • Mandarin and Cantonese are often considered
    dialects and not languages, despite their mutual
    unintelligibility, because they share a common
    literary standard and common body of literature

9
  • The number of speakers, and the geographical area
    covered by them, can be of arbitrary size
  • a dialect might contain several sub-dialects
  • A dialect is a complete system of verbal
    communication oral or signed, but not necessarily
    written with its own vocabulary and grammar
  • A dialect is distinguished by its vocabulary,
    grammar, and pronunciation including phonology
    and prosody

10
  • the "dialects" of a "language" which itself may
    be a "dialect" of a yet older tongue may or may
    not be mutually intelligible
  • a parent language may spawn several "dialects"
    which themselves subdivide any number of times,
    with some "branches" of the tree changing more
    rapidly than others

11
  • among the modern Romance tongues, with Italian
    and Spanish having a high degree of mutual
    comprehensibility, which neither language shares
    with French, despite both languages being
    genetically closer to French than to each other
  • French has undergone more rapid change than have
    Spanish and Italian

12
Standard and non-standard dialects
  • A standard dialect a dialect that is supported
    by institutions
  • Such institutional support may include
    government recognition or designation
  • presentation as being the "correct" form of a
    language in schools
  • published grammars, dictionaries, and textbooks
    that set forth a "correct" spoken and written
    form

13
  • an extensive formal literature that employs that
    dialect in prose, poetry, non-fiction, etc.
  • Standard American English, Standard British
    English, Standard Indian English, Standard
    Australian English, and Standard Philippine
    English may all be said to be standard dialects
    of the English language

14
Non-standard Dialect
  • A nonstandard dialect has a complete vocabulary,
    grammar, and syntax, but is not the beneficiary
    of institutional support
  • An example of a nonstandard English dialect is
    Southern English
  • The Dialect Test was designed by Joseph Wright
    to compare different English dialects with each
    other

15
Regional dialect
  • not a distinct language
  • a variety of a language spoken in a particular
    area of a country
  • Some regional dialects have been given
    traditional names which mark them out as being
    significantly different from standard varieties
    spoken in the same place
  • Ex 'Hillbilly English' from the Appalachians in
    the USA and 'Geordie' from Newcastle upon Tyne in
    the UK

16
Minority dialect
  • Sometimes members of a particular minority ethnic
    group have their own variety which they use as a
    marker of identity, usually alongside a standard
    variety
  • Ex African American Vernacular English in the
    USA, London Jamaican in Britain, and Aboriginal
    English in Australia

17
Indigenized variety
  • Indigenized varieties are spoken mainly as second
    languages in ex-colonies with multilingual
    populations
  • The differences from the standard variety may be
    linked to English proficiency, or may be part of
    a range of varieties used to express identity.
  • 'Singlish' spoken in Singapore is a variety very
    different from standard English, and there are
    many other varieties of English used in India

18
Sociolect
  • the variety of language characteristic of a
    social background or status
  • A dialect which evolves from regional speech may
    also have sociolectical implications
  • Ex standard Italian is a dialect in that it is
    particular to Tuscany yet, being the national
    language of Italy, it is also a sociolect in that
    it carries a certain prestige from being the
    lingua franca throughout the country both in
    broadcasting, in the press, and by people of high
    social status

19
Idiolect
  • a variety of a language unique to an individual
  • manifested by patterns of word selection and
    grammar, or words, phrases, idioms, or
    pronunciations that are unique to that individual
  • Every individual has an idiolect
  • the grouping of words and phrases is unique,
    rather than an individual using specific words
    that nobody else uses
  • idiolect can easily evolve into an ecolecta
    dialect variant specific to a household
  • languages are congruences of idiolects and thus
    exist only in the intersection between individual
    speakers
  • Idiolects change through contact with other
    idiolects, and change throughout their lifetime
    as well as from generation to generation

20
Register
  • term was originated by Thomas Bertram Reid in
    1956
  • Become common in the 1960s introduced by a group
    of linguists who wanted to distinguish between
    variations in language according to the user and
    variations according to use,
  • each speaker has a range of varieties and
    choices between them at different times

  • (Halliday et al, 1964)
  • focus is on the way language is used in
    particular situations
  • Halliday (1964) identifies three variables that
    determine register field (the subject matter of
    the discourse), tenor (the participants and their
    relationships) and mode (the channel of
    communication, e.g. spoken or written)

21
Summary
  • Varieties of Language
  • Dialects
  • Sociolects
  • Idiolects
  • Register
  • Isogloss
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com