Quiz 1


Kartei Details

Karten 33
Sprache English
Kategorie Englisch
Stufe Universität
Erstellt / Aktualisiert 08.04.2016 / 28.04.2016
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speech community

group of people who are in habitual contact with one another, who share a language variety and social conventions or sociolinguistic norms about language use.

social category

way of grouping people by traits that are relatively fixed  OR open to active performance. characteristics such as class, gender, ethnicity --> fixed. open to active performance and construction: identity.

 

social relationships

how each of us, as social beings, adapt our language to suit the sitation and the audience. Often contrasted with social characterstics, the socially relevant traits that we are seen to posses.

variation

a different or distinct form or version of something. i.e. a change of vowel, realisation of phoneme. important for language variation: it is always patterned and socially and historically determined. variation can occur in all fields of linguistics: phonology, morphology, syntax, lexis, practices.

free vs. structured variation

free variation: speakers choice between variants is completely arbitrary and unpredictable.

structured variation: speakers choice between variants is linked to other factors.

competence vs. performance

competence: refers primarily to what sepakers know about language

performance: what speakers actually produce when speaking (might be full uf false starts, uhms, etc).

 

levels of variation

-individual: style (casual, careful, formal)

-situational (setting, paricipants, ends, norms, genres)

-social (class, sex, age)

-regional (varieties, "dialects")

linguistic variable

Any linguistic unit realized by more than one norm. 

linguistic norm

Any linguistic feature that occurs regularly in the speech of more than one speaker in the community. 

sociolinguistic variable

Any linguistic variable sensitive to social context. 

explain the sociolinguistic interview

welllll.....

- pioneered by William Labov

- a structured interview

-attempt at eliciting different styles, ranging from formal to casual

-different tasks during the interview:

  • a list of minimal pairs (formal) 

  • a word list (formal)
  • reading passage (formal)
  • the interview style (informal/casual)

What can you study with data derived from the sociolinguisEc interview?

  • •  Phonological (rhoticity, short front vowels, consonant clusters, /ing/)

  • •  Morphological (dived vs. dove)

  • •  Syntactic (ain’t or isn’t)

  • •  Lexical (pavement - sidewalk, bloody - very, etc.)

  • •  What can you not study

  •  many speech acts (apologies, compliments, etc.)

  •  interacEonal pracEces 

mutual intelligibillity

when people of different varieties of language or dialect are able to understand each other, their varieties are mutually intelligible.

standard vs non-standard

standard: codiefied cariety of a language; taught in school, used in formal writing, often heard in TV news or people/things that try to project authority or ability.

non-standard: varieties of language that differ from standard.

descriptivist vs prescriptivist

descriptivist: non-evaluative approach to language, focused on how language is actually used, without deciding if it is 'right' or wrong.

prescriptivist: approach to language that is focused on rules of correctness; how language 'should' be used.

social distance

degree of intimacy or familiarity between interlocutors.

Kachru model

Inner circle: norm-providing

outer circle: norm-developping (in the process of standartisation)

expanding circle: norm-depending

 

problem with Kachru model?

it is based on geography and genetics, it leaves out performance of language and social differences.

Modiano Model

EIL = English as an International Language.

EIL is a core of features common to all varieties..

second circle consists of features which may become internationally comprehensible or fall into obscurity.

outer area consits of five groups with features each peculiar to the own speech community.

 

 

Community of Practice

smaller analytical domain than social network

characterised by 3 traits:

-mutual engagement

-jointly negotiated enterprise

-shared repertoire

social network

different groups of people that each of us has interacted with over the years.

covert prestige

linguistic equivalent to street credibility. a norm or target that speakers unconsciously orient to, with a sprt of hidden positive evaluation that speakers give to other (presumably non-standard) forms.

prestige

variants associated with higher status groups are considered prestige forms.

variants

actual realisations of variables. i.e. pronouncing the -ing as -in'

borrowed prestige

to use language features associated with a particular class because of a setting/role of the speaker.

social hypercorrection

when speakers overdo what they see as the linguistic requirements of a situation.

marked vs. unmarked

marked: a feature that gets noticed, 'weird'

unmarked: feature that does not get noticed.

 

overt prestige

positive or negative assessment (bewertung) of variants that are in line with the dominant norms ('sounding proper)

matched guise test

a test designed to elicit unexpressed language attitudes by asking people to rate recorded speakers on a scale according to traits like social class, friendliness, intelligence. however, the people often listen to the same speaker several times, using different accents or speaking different languages.

standartisation

  • includes the selection, codification, elaboration of function & acceptance of a variety of a language; the variety that undergoes the process of standardization is referred to as the standard variety 

social class

 set of discrete locations in a socioeconomic hierarchy 

social status

social positions that society assigns to its members, or the differences between social groups, in terms of the prestige associated with them by others.

combined class index

class is represented as a socioeconomic scale combining three class indicators - education level, family income, occupational rank (see Labov 1966) 

 vernacular culture index

jenny cheshire text.

the use of non-standard features is controlled by the norms of the vernacular subculture.

an adequate sample of non-standard forms is more likely to be found where speakers conform more closely to the vernacular forms that to the overt forms of the dominant mainstream culture.

the index shows what factors are idicators for belonging to the vernacular culture.

i.e. in Cheshire, there were 6 factors: skill at fighting, carrying of a weapon, participation in minor crimes, job hopes, style, swearing.