Course Title: General Linguistics II - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 209
About This Presentation
Title:

Course Title: General Linguistics II

Description:

Basic requirements of language acquisition: 1. The child should be exposed to a given language. ... a fairly fixed repertoire of L2 expressions, containing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:967
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 210
Provided by: MR1103
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Course Title: General Linguistics II


1
Course Title General Linguistics II
  • Source The Study of language (2)( 3rd ed.)
  • Author George YuleUnits 2Prepared by
    Belghais Rovshan

2
The Study of Language
  • Contents
  • Pragmatics
  • Discourse analysis
  • Language and the brain
  • First language acquisition
  • Second language acquisition/learning
  • Gestures and sign languages
  • Language history and change
  • Language and regional variation
  • Language and social variation
  • Language and culture

3
The Study of Language (2)
  • Objectives
  • The main objectives of this course are
  • To familiarize the students with the
    interdisciplinary sciences such as
    neurolinguistics and sociolinguistics.
  • To provide them with some information about
    linguistic changes in the course of history.

4
The Study of Language (2)
  • Status
  • The students of English translation and English
    language and literature, in their listening,
    speaking, reading and writing courses deal with
    the language. So they should have some conscious
    knowledge about this mental system and how it
    works.

5
11 Pragmatics
6
The Study of Language (2)
  • Pragmatics is the study of 'intended speaker
    meaning. The meaning of linguistic units are
    studied in given contexts of situation.

7
The Study of Language (2)
  • Pragmatics is the study of 'invisible' meaning ,
    example

SALE
BABY TO DDLER
8
The Study of Language (2)
  • Different types of context
  • 1. Linguistic context or co-text
  • ??? ?? ??? ?????? ???? ?????
  • 2. Context of situation or physical context
  • ??? ?? ??? ?? ?? ????????

9
The Study of Language (2)
  • Deictic expression The word whose exact meaning
    is revealed in given physical contexts , example
    here, this, now, she.

10
The Study of Language (2)
  • Deictic expressions
  • 1. Person deixis me, you, him, them
  • 2. Place deixis there, yonder, here.
  • 3. Time deixis then, today
  • - ????? ???? ???? ????.

11
The Study of Language (2)
  • Reference is the act by which a speaker uses
    language to enable a listener to identify
    something.

12
The Study of Language (2)
  • We can refer to things and people we don't know.
  • ?? ????? ????? ?? ????? ??? ?????? ????? ????
    ??? ????.

13
The Study of Language (2)
  • An inference is any additional information used
    by the listener to connect what is said to what
    must be meant.

14
The Study of Language (2)
  • Referential relationship
  • Tom bought a book. It was interesting.
  • book antecedent
  • It anaphora (ie deictic expression)

15
The Study of Language (2)
  • Presupposition is what a speaker assumes is true
    or known by the hearer.
  • ???? ????? ??? ????? ???.
  • ??? ??? ??? ????? ????.

16
The Study of Language (2)
  • Constancy under negation is the test for
    presupposition.
  • 1. ????? ??? ????? ???. (??? ????? ????.)
  • 2. ????? ??? ????? ????.
  • (??? ????? ????.)

17
The Study of Language (2)
  • Speech act (??????)
  • 'Actions' like 'requesting', 'commanding',
    'questioning' and 'informing'.
  • Types of speech act Direct and Indirect.

18
The Study of Language (2)
  • Examples of direct speech acts
  • 1. Did he go to school yesterday?
  • (???? ???? ????? ???? ????)
  • 2. Please don't make so much noise.
  • (????? ???? ?????? ????? ?????)

19
The Study of Language (2)
  • Politeness is showing awareness on another
    person's face.
  • Our face is our public self- image.
  • What we say might be a face-threatening or
    face-saving act.

20
The Study of Language (2)
  • Different types of face
  • 1. Negative face (ie you want to be independent
    and free)
  • 2. Positive face (ie you want to be connected
    with others)

21
12 Discourse Analysis
22
The Study of Language (2)
  • Discourse analysis deals with the ways people
    make sense of what they read, understand what
    speakers mean and recognize connected (ie
    coherent) discourses.

23
The Study of Language (2)
  • Discourse analysis also deals with the way people
    successfully take part in conversation.

24
The Study of Language (2)
  • Text structure This structure differs from that
    of a single sentence since it depends on
    particular factors.

25
The Study of Language (2)
  • Some of the factors related to text structure are
    described in terms of cohesion, or visible ties
    and connections existing within text.

26
The Study of Language (2)
  • A Cohesive and coherent text
  • John bought an expensive car. He did it by
    working day and night. However, he sold it very
    soon.

27
The Study of Language (2)
  • Coherence is the factor which leads us to
    distinguish connected texts which make sense. The
    key to this concept is something which exists in
    people.

28
The Study of Language (2)
  • To understand a given text, we should fill in a
    lot of 'gaps' which exist in the text.
  • ???? ???? ??? ???? ???.
  • ????? ???? ?????? ????.

29
The Study of Language (2)
  • Conversational interaction
  • 1. We should take turn at speaking.
  • 2. By signaling a completion point, we should
    indicate that we have finished.

30
The Study of Language (2)
  • The co-operative principle
  • In most conversational exchanges the participants
    co-operate with each other.
  • Example -Are you coming to the party tonight?
  • - I've got an exam tomorrow.

31
The Study of Language (2)
  • Grice's maxims(1)
  • Quantity Make your contribution as informative
    as is required, but not more, or less, than is
    required
  • Relation Be relevant

32
The Study of Language (2)
  • Grice's maxims(2)
  • Quality Do not say that which you believe to be
    false or for which you lack evidence
  • Manner Be clear, brief and orderly.

33
The Study of Language (2)
  • Hedges
  • We use certain types of expressions, called
    hedges, to show that we are concerned about
    following the maxims while being co-operative
    participants in conversation.

34
The Study of Language (2)
  • Hedges can be defined as words or phrases used to
    indicate that were not really sure that what
    were saying is sufficiently correct or complete.
  • Example
  • As far as I know,
  • Now, correct me if Im wrong, but
  • Im not absolutely sure, but

35
The Study of Language (2)
  • Implicatures
  • When we try to analyze how hedges work, we
    usually talk about speakers implying something
    that is not said.
  • Example
  • CAROL Are you coming to the party tonight?
  • LARA Ive got an exam tomorrow.

36
The Study of Language (2)
  • Background knowledge
  • We have conventional knowledge, in our culture,
    about different phenomena, objects, places, etc.

37
The Study of Language (2)
  • Schema A general form for a conventional
    knowledge structure which exists in memory.
  • E.g. supermarket schema
  • A number of conventional features.

38
The Study of Language (2)
  • Script A dynamic schema, in which a series of
    conventional actions take place.
  • ???? 1) ??? ?????? 2) ?? ????? ???? ????? 3)
    ???? ???? ????

39
13 Language and the brain
40
The Study of Language (2)
  • The relation between language and the brain is
    studied in neurolinguistics. It is an
    interdisciplinary science.

41
The Study of Language (2)
  • Parts of the brain responsible for the production
    and comprehension of speech
  • 1. Brocas area speech cortex.
  • 2. Wernickes area posterior speech cortex.

42
The Study of Language (2)
  • Other parts involved in speech production
  • 1. Motor cortex which controls movements of
    muscles.
  • 2. The arcuate fasciculus a bundle of nerve
    fibers connecting the two areas.

43
The Study of Language (2)
  • The localization view holds that specific aspects
    of language ability can be accorded specific
    location in the brain.

44
The Study of Language (2)
  • Linguistic processes dont provide direct
    physical evidence and there is no access to
    language system. Therefore, we infer its
    properties from its transitory malfunctions.

45
The Study of Language (2)
  • Transitory malfunctions
  • 1. The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon.
  • 2. The slip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
    (Spoonerism).
  • 3. The slip-of-the- ear phenomenon.

46
The Study of Language (2)
  • The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
  • You feel some word is just eluding you.
  • - malapropisms Near-misses.

47
The Study of Language (2)
  • The slip-of-the-tongue It often results in
    tangled expressions
  • Long shory stort (??? ? ???? ? ?????)
  • (?? ?? ???? ? ??? ????)
  • - Tips of the slung black bloxes.

48
The Study of Language (2)
  • Aphasia is the impairment of language function
    due to localized cerebral damage.
  • There are different types of aphasia.

49
The Study of Language (2)
  • Types of Aphasia
  • 1. Brocas Aphasia is characterized by difficulty
    in speech production.
  • 2. Wernickes Aphasia is characterized by fluent
    speech which doesnt make sense.

50
The Study of Language (2)
  • Types of Aphasia
  • 3. Conduction Aphasia is characterized by
    disrupted rhythm because of pauses and
    hesitations.

51
The Study of Language (2)
  • Dichotic listening test This technique uses the
    fact that anything experienced on the right-hand
    side of the body is processed in the left brain.

52
The Study of Language (2)
  • What does the left hemisphere of the brain do?
  • Among other things, it handles language sounds
    and does analytic processing.

53
The Study of Language (2)
  • What does the Right hemisphere of the brain do?
  • Among other things, it handles non-verbal sounds
    and does holistic processing.

54
The Study of Language (2)
  • The Critical period It is the period when human
    brain is most ready to receive and learn a
    particular language.

55
The Study of Language (2)
  • Genies Case
  • She was thirteen years old and spent most of her
    life tied to a chair in a small closed room.

56
The Study of Language (2)
  • The relation between language and the brain is
    studied in neurolinguistics. It is an
    interdisciplinary science.

57
The Study of Language (2)
  • Genie was unable to use language when she was
    first brought into care. However, within short
    period of time, she began to respond to the
    speech of others.

58
The Study of Language (2)
  • When Genie was beginning to use speech, it was
    noted that she went through some of the same
    early stages found in normal child language
    acquistion.

59
14 First Language Acquisition
60
The Study of Language (2)
  • First language acquisition is remarkable for the
    speed with which it takes place.

61
The Study of Language (2)
  • Long before a child starts school, he or she
    has become an extremely sophisticated language
    user, operating a system for self -expression and
    communication.

62
The Study of Language (2)
  • First language acquisition occurs without overt
    instruction.
  • There is some innate predisposition in the
    human infant to acquire language.

63
The Study of Language (2)
  • Basic requirements of language acquisition
  • 1. The child should be exposed to a given
    language.
  • 2. The child needs interaction with other
    language users.

64
The Study of Language (2)
  • 3. The child must also be physically capable of
    sending and receiving sound signals in a
    language. A child who doesnt hear or is not
    allowed to use language will learn no language.

65
The Study of Language (2)
  • The acquisition schedule
  • All normal children develop language at roughly
    the same time, along much the same schedule.

66
The Study of Language (2)
  • Caregiver speech has the following features
  • 1. Simplified speech style.
  • 2. Frequent questions with exaggerated
    intonation, extra loudness and a slower tempo
    with longer pauses.
  • 3. Baby talk in early stages.

67
The Study of Language (2)
  • Cooing and babbling
  • 1. Cooing the first recognizable sounds
    (k,g,i,u)
  • 2. Babbling Syllable type sounds recognizable
    intonation patterns.

68
The Study of Language (2)
  • The holophrastic stage
  • A single form is used to function as a phrase or
    sentence.
  • ???? ?? 1) ?? ??????? ? 2) ??? ?? ???
  • 3) ?? ???? ???? ....

69
The Study of Language (2)
  • Telegraphic stage Strings of lexical morphemes
    are produced e.g. cat drink milk.
  • ???? ?? ???? ??? ??? ? ??? ???? ???
  • - Grammatical inflections begin.

70
The Study of Language (2)
  • By the of two-and-a-half years, the childs
    vocabulary is expanding rapidly and the child is
    initiating more talk.

71
The Study of Language (2)
  • The acquisition process
  • This process takes place without (direct)
    instruction. Correction is of no use.

72
The Study of Language (2)
  • Acquisition of different Linguistic levels
  • 1. Morphology
  • 2. Syntax
  • 3. Semantics

73
The Study of Language (2)
  • Morphology there is an order in the acquisition
    of different morphological phenomena. E.g. 1)-
    ing form 2) plural morpheme (-s) and over
    generalization
  • 3) Genetive form (-s),etc.

74
The Study of Language (2)
  • Syntax (1) It is not acquired by means of
    imitation.
  • There are identifiable stages in the formation of
    questions and negatives .

75
The Study of Language (2)
  • Syntax(2)
  • 1. Questions (1) where kitty?/ see hole?/ (2)
    what book name?/ (3) Can I have this?
  • 2. Negatives (1) no mitton/no fall/ (2) I dont
    know/ (3) she wont go.

76
The Study of Language (2)
  • Semantics(1) During the holophrastic stage
    single words refer to a large number of unrelated
    objects.
  • ???? ??? ??? 1) ???? 2) ??? ????
  • 3) ?????? ????

77
The Study of Language (2)
  • Semantics(2)Children overextend the meaning of a
    word on the basis of similarities of shape, sound
    and size, and sometimes of movement or texture.

78
The Study of Language (2)
  • Semantics(3) Childrens semantic development
    begins with the process of overextension and is
    followed by narrowing down the application of
    each term.

79
The Study of Language (2)
  • Semantics(4) lexical relations
  • - Regarding hyponymy, the middle level term is
    acquired first (e.g. dog).
  • - Antonymous relations are acquired fairly late.

80
The Study of Language (2)
  • It is normally assumed that, by the age of five,
    the child has completed the greater part of the
    basic language acquisition process.

81
The Study of Language (2)
  • According to some, the child is in a good
    position to start learning a second (or foreign)
    language by the age of five.

82
15 Second Language Acquisition/Learning
83
The Study of Language (2)
  • Second language learning
  • A distinction is sometimes made between learning
    in a foreign language setting and a second
    language setting.

84
The Study of Language (2)
  • Learning in a foreign language setting means
    learning a language that is not generally spoken
    in the surrounding community. But learning in a
    second language means learning a language that is
    spoken in the surrounding community.

85
The Study of Language (2)
  • Acquisition and learning
  • -The term acquisition is used to refer to the
    gradual development of ability in a language by
    using it naturally in communicative situations
    with others who know the language.

86
The Study of Language (2)
  • The term learning, however, applies to a more
    conscious process of accumulating knowledge of
    the features typically in an institutional
    setting.

87
The Study of Language (2)
  • Acquisition Barriers
  • Barriers in second language learning reduce the
    speed of learning in adults.
  • The affective factors describe a kind of barrier
    to acquisition/ learning resulting from negative
    feelings or experiences.

88
The Study of Language (2)
  • Focus on method
  • Methods aimed at fostering L2 learning
  • 1) The grammar-translation method, 2) audio
    lingual method, 3) communicative approaches.

89
The Study of Language (2)
  • - In the grammar - translation method Vocabulary
    lists and sets of grammar rules are used to
    define the target of learning, memorization is
    encouraged, and written language rather than
    spoken language is emphasized.

90
The Study of Language (2)
  • The audiolingual method was strongly influenced
    by a belief that the fluent that the fluent use
    of a language was essentially a set of habits
    that could be develop with a lot of practice.

91
The Study of Language (2)
  • Communication approaches are all based on a
    belief that the functions of language (what is
    used for) should be emphasized rather than the
    forms of the language ( correct grammatical or
    phonological structures).

92
The Study of Language (2)
  • Focus on the learner
  • 1. Errors should be tolerated. They indicate that
    acquisition process is in action and that there
    is creative construction.
  • 2. Errors may be due to transfer.

93
The Study of Language (2)
  • Transfer it means using sounds, expressions or
    structures from the L1 when performing in the L2.
  • Transfer might be positive or negative.

94
The Study of Language (2)
  • Interlanguage
  • It is an in-between system used in L2
    acquisition/ learning.

95
The Study of Language (2)
  • Fossilization
  • If some learners develop a fairly fixed
    repertoire of L2 expressions, containing many
    forms that do not match the target language, and
    seem not to be progressing any further, their
    interlingua is said to have fossilized.

96
The Study of Language (2)
  • Motivation
  • There are several factors that combine in a
    profile of a successful L2 learner. Obviously,
    the motivation to learn is important.

97
The Study of Language (2)
  • - Many learners have an instrumental motivation.
    That is , they want to learn the L2 in order to
    achieve some other goals but not really for any
    social purposes.

98
The Study of Language (2)
  • - In contrast, those learners with an integrative
    motivation want to learn the L2 for social
    purposes. Motivation may be as much a result of
    success as a cause.

99
The Study of Language (2)
  • Foreigner talk simpler structures (input)
    provided by natives for foreigners.
  • Negotiated input L2 material acquired in
    interaction by requesting for clarification.

100
The Study of Language (2)
  • Communicative competence is defined in terms of 3
    components
  • 1. Grammatical competence
  • 2. Sociolinguistic competence
  • 3. Strategic competence

101
The Study of Language (2)
  • Grammatical competence involves the accurate use
    of words and structures.
  • Sociolinguistic competence is the ability to use
    appropriate language.
  • Strategic competence is the ability to organize a
    message effectively and to compensate, via
    strategies, for any difficulties.

102
16 Gestures and Sign Languages
103
The Study of Language (2)
  • Sign language is naturally acquired by deaf
    children.
  • American sign language (ASL) is a natural
    language. So is the Iranian sign language.

104
The Study of Language (2)
  • Gestures
  • Although both sign and gestures involve the use
    of the hands (with other parts of the body), they
    are rather different.

105
The Study of Language (2)
  • Sign is like speech and is used instead of
    speaking, whereas gestures are mostly used while
    speaking.

106
The Study of Language (2)
  • In the study od non-verbal behavior, a
    distinction can be drawn between gestures and
    emblems. Emblems are signals such as thumbs up (
    things are good) or shush ( keep quiet0 that
    function like fixed phrases.

107
The Study of Language (2)
  • Emblems are conventional and depend on social
    knowledge. In Britain, the use of two fingers
    raised in a V-shape traditionally represents one
    emblem ( victory )

108
The Study of Language (2)
  • Type of gestures
  • Iconics , 2) deictics, 3) beats.
  • Iconics are gestures that seem to be a reflection
    of the meaning of what is said.
  • Deictics as noted in chapter 11, the term
    deictic means pointing and we often use gestures
    to point to things or people while talking.

109
The Study of Language (2)
  • Beats are short quick movements of the hand or
    fingers. These gestures accompany the rhythm to
    talk and are often used to emphasize parts of
    what is being said.

110
The Study of Language (2)
  • Alternate sign language is a system of gestures
    developed by speakers for limited communication
    in a specific context where speech can not be
    used.

111
The Study of Language (2)
  • Primary sign language is the first language of a
    group that does not have access to a spoken
    language, e.g. ASL.

112
The Study of Language (2)
  • Oralism emphasizes that students practice English
    speech sounds and develop lipreading skills.

113
The Study of Language (2)
  • The structure of signs
  • There are four key aspects of visual information,
    i.e shape, orientation, location and movement.
  • These are called articulatory parameters.

114
The Study of Language (2)
  • The articulatory parameters of ASL can be
    analyzed in to a set of primes in order to
    produce a full feature analysis of each sign.

115
The Study of Language (2)
  • Spoken words are linear sequences of sound
    segments, while a sign is a combination of
    simultaneous components within spatial
    dimensions.
  • ASL forms have iconic base.

116
The Study of Language (2)
  • Representing signs
  • Strictly speaking, the only way to write
    Ameslan is to use motion pictures.( Lou Fant ,
    1977)

117
17 Language History and Change
118
The Study of Language (2)
  • Historical development of languages is studied to
    characterizes the regular processes involved in
    language change.

119
The Study of Language (2)
  • Investigating the features of older languages,
    and the ways in which they developed into modern
    languages, involves us in the study of language
    history and change, also known as philology.

120
The Study of Language (2)
  • In the nineteenth century, philology dominated
    the study of language and one result was the
    creation of family tree to show how language were
    related.

121
The Study of Language (2)
  • Family trees during the 19th century
    philologists tried to describe proto-Indo-European
    and trace the branches of her family tree.

122
The Study of Language (2)
  • Some branches of proto-Indo-European

Germanic
Italiac
Hellenic
Indo- Iranian
Latin
German English Danish
Indic Iranian Kurdish
Pashto
Hindi Punjabi
(Sanskrit)
Italian Spanish
123
The Study of Language (2)
  • Family connections
  • One way to get a clearer picture of how languages
    are related is through looking at records of an
    older generation like Latin and Sanskrit, from
    which the modern language involved.

124
The Study of Language (2)
  • Cognates Regarding the possible family
    relationship between different languages, a word
    in one language may have a similar form in
    another, used with a similar meaning.

125
The Study of Language (2)
  • Examples of cognates
  • 1. Mother is the cognate of???? and Mutter.
  • 2. Father is the cognate of Vater.

126
The Study of Language (2)
  • Comparative reconstruction is a procedure whereby
    the original, or proto form of the common
    ancestral language is reconstructed mainly on the
    basis of cognates.

127
The Study of Language (2)
  • Different stages of the English language
  • 1. Old English
  • 2. Middle English
  • 3. Modern English

128
The Study of Language (2)
  • Historical changes of languages
  • 1. External changes Borrowing
  • 2. Internal changes 1) Sound changes 2)
    Syntactic changes
  • 3) Lexical changes.

129
The Study of Language (2)
  • Internal changes(1)
  • Sound changes
  • 1) Metathesis acsin ? ask.
  • 2) Epenthesis timr ? timber.
  • 3) Prothesis schola ? escuela.

130
The Study of Language (2)
  • Internal changes(2)
  • Syntactic changes word order.
  • ME S V O vs non-extant order like VS (ferde he).

131
The Study of Language (2)
  • Internal changes(3)
  • Lexical changes
  • 1. Some words are no longer used foin
  • 2. Broadening of meaning dog.
  • 3. Narrowing of meaning hund

132
The Study of Language (2)
  • The most pervasive source of change in language
    seems to be in the continual process of cultural
    transmission.

133
The Study of Language (2)
  • Diachronic vs synchronic studies of language
  • In diachronic studies the changes are considered
    from the historical perspective while in the
    synchronic one they are considered at the same
    time.

134
The Study of Language (2)
  • The distinction between diachronic and synchronic
    studies was first mentioned by Ferdinand de
    Saussure.

135
18 Language and Regional Variation
136
The Study of Language (2)
  • A way of doing linguistic geography is to
    investigate aspects of language variation based
    on where that language is used.

137
The Study of Language (2)
  • Language varieties Every language has more than
    one variety, especially in the way in which it is
    spoken.

138
The Study of Language (2)
  • The standard language This is actually an
    idealized variety, but exists for most people as
    the version that is accepted as the official
    language of their community or country.

139
The Study of Language (2)
  • Accent vs dialect
  • The form accent is restricted to the description
    of aspects of pronunciation ,while dialect
    describes features of grammar and vocabulary as
    well as pronunciation.

140
The Study of Language (2)
  • A regional dialect has some consistent features
    of speech found in one geographical are rather
    than another.

141
The Study of Language (2)
  • Isogloss An isogloss is the line on a map which
    represents a boundary between the areas with
    regard to one particular linguistic item.
    (e.g.paper sack/bag)

142
The Study of Language (2)
  • Dialect boundary is formed when a number of
    isoglosses come together. (e.g. paper sack/bag
    pail/bucket)

143
The Study of Language (2)
  • The dialect continuum
  • Regional variations exist along a continuum
    there is no sharp break from one region to the
    next.

144
The Study of Language (2)
  • The bidialectal Those who speak two dialects.
  • The bilingual Those who speak two distinct
    languages.

145
The Study of Language (2)
  • Bilingualism
  • In many countries regional variation is not a
    matter of two dialects of a single language, but
    a matter of two quite different languages.

146
The Study of Language (2)
  • A rather special situation involving two distinct
    varieties of a language, called diglossia, exists
    in some countries. In diglossia, there as a law
    variety, acquired locally and used for everyday
    affairs, and a high or special variety, learned
    in school and used for important matters.

147
The Study of Language (2)
  • Language planning involves the question Which
    varieties of the language spoken in a country are
    to be used for official business?

148
The Study of Language (2)
  • Processes of language planning
  • 1) selection 2) Codification
  • 3) Elaboration 4) Implementation.
  • These processes are ordered.

149
The Study of Language (2)
  • Pidgins A pidgin is a variety of language which
    developed for some special purpose among people
    who did not know each others languages.

150
The Study of Language (2)
  • A pidgin is described as an English pidgin if
    English is the lexifier language, that is, the
    main source of words in the pidgin.

151
The Study of Language (2)
  • Creoles When a pidgin becomes the first language
    of a social community, it is in fact a creole.
    Creoles are natural language systems.

152
The Study of Language (2)
  • The post-creole continuum(1)
  • Decreolization
  • Basilect mesolects acrolect
  • Ie the range of varieties evolving after the
    creole has been created.

153
19 Language and Social Variation
154
The Study of Language (2)
  • A speech community is a group of people who share
    a set of norms and expectations regarding the use
    of language. The study of the linguistic features
    that have social relevance for participants in
    speech communities is called sociolinguistics.

155
The Study of Language (2)
  • Sociolinguistics, like neurolinguistics, is an
    interdisiplinary science.
  • It deals with the inter-relationships between
    language and society.

156
The Study of Language (2)
  • Social dialects
  • The traditional study of regional dialects tended
    to concentrate on the speech of people in rural
    areas, while the study of social dialects has
    been mainly concerned with speakers in towns and
    cities.

157
The Study of Language (2)
  • In the social study of dialect, it is social
    class that is mainly used. The two main groups
    are generally identified as middle class, and
    working class. When we refer to working-class
    speech, we are talking about a social dialect.

158
The Study of Language (2)
  • when we look for other examples of language use
    that might be characteristic of social dialect,
    we treat class as the social variable and the
    pronunciation or word as the linguistic variable.

159
The Study of Language (2)
  • Idiolect
  • An individual way of speaking or a personal
    dialect is known as idiolect.

160
The Study of Language (2)
  • Social markers
  • A social marker is a feature that occurs
    frequently in your speech (or not) and marks you
    as a member of a particular social group, whether
    you realize it or not.

161
The Study of Language (2)
  • Speech style
  • - The most basic distinction in speech style is
    between formal uses and informal uses. Formal
    style is when we pay more careful attention to
    how were speaking and informal style is when we
    pay less attention.

162
The Study of Language (2)
  • Style-shifting
  • - A change from one style to the other by an
    individual is called style-shifting.

163
The Study of Language (2)
  • Prestige
  • 1. Overt prestige The positively valued ways of
    speaking in social communities.
  • 2. Covert prestige A hidden status of a speech
    style that has positive value.

164
The Study of Language (2)
  • Speech accommodation
  • It is defined as our ability to modify our speech
    style toward or away from the perceived style of
    person (s) were talking to.

165
The Study of Language (2)
  • We can adopt a speech style that attempts to
    reduce social distance, described as convergence,
    and use forms that are similar to those used by
    the person were talking to.

166
The Study of Language (2)
  • In contrast, when a speech style is used to
    emphasize social distance between speakers, the
    process is called divergence.

167
The Study of Language (2)
  • Register
  • another influence on speech style that is tied
    to social identity derives from register. A
    register is a conventional way of using language
    that is appropriate in a specific context, which
    may be identified as situational, occupational
    or topical.

168
The Study of Language (2)
  • Jargon
  • One of the defining features of a register is the
    use of jargon, which is special technical
    vocabulary ( e.g. plaintiff, suffix ) associated
    with a specific area of work or interest.

169
The Study of Language (2)
  • Slang
  • Slang, or colloquial speech, describes words or
    phrases that are used instead of more everyday
    terms among younger speakers and other groups
    with special interests.

170
The Study of Language (2)
  • like clothing and music, slang is an aspect of
    social life that is subject to fashion,
    especially among adolescents.

171
The Study of Language (2)
  • The use of slang varies within the younger social
    group, as illustrated by the use of obscenities
    or taboo terms. Taboo terms are words and phrases
    that people avoid for reasons related to
    religion, politeness and prohibited behavior.

172
The Study of Language (2)
  • Social barriers
  • in much the same way as large geographical
    barriers between groups foster linguistic
    differences in regional dialects, social barriers
    such as discrimination and segregation serve to
    create marked differences between social dialects.

173
The Study of Language (2)
  • Vernacular language
  • The form of African American English (AAE) that
    has been most studied is usually described as
    African American Vernacular English (AAVE).

174
The Study of Language (2)
  • The vernacular is a general expression for a
    kind of social dialect, typically spoken by a
    lower-status group, which is treated as
    non-standard because of marked differences from a
    socially prestigious variety.

175
The Study of Language (2)
  • The sounds of a vernacular
  • A pervasive phonological feature in AAVE and
    other English vernaculars is the tendency to
    reduce final consonant clusters, so that words
    ending in two consonants ( left hand) are often
    pronounced as if there is only one ( lef han).

176
The Study of Language (2)
  • The grammar of a vernacular
  • It is typically in aspects of grammar that AAVE
    and other vernaculars are most stigmatized as
    being illogical or sloppy. One frequently
    criticized element is the double negative
    construction, e.g. He dont know nothin.

177
20 Language and Culture
178
The Study of Language (2)
  • Anthropologists have used language as a source of
    information in the general study of culture.

179
The Study of Language (2)
  • Culture
  • The term culture refers to all the ideas and
    assumptions about the nature of things and people
    that we learn when we become members of social
    groups. It can be defined as socially acquired
    knowledge.

180
The Study of Language (2)
  • People of different cultures have different
    world views reflected in their languages.

181
The Study of Language (2)
  • Categories
  • A category is a group with certain features in
    common and we can think of the vocabulary we
    learn as an inherited set of category labels.
    These are the words for referring to concepts
    that people in our social world have typically
    needed to talk about.

182
The Study of Language (2)
  • It is tempting to believe that there is a fixed
    relationship between the set of words we have
    learned ( our categories ) and the way external
    reality is organized. However, the organization
    of external reality actually varies to some
    extent according to the language being used to
    talk about it.

183
The Study of Language (2)
  • Some languages may have lots of different words
    for types of rain or kinds of coconut and other
    languages may have only one or two.

184
The Study of Language (2)
  • We can say that there are conceptual distinctions
    that are lexicalized (expressed as a single word
    ) in one language and not in another.

185
The Study of Language (2)
  • Linguistic relativity it seems that the
    structure of our language, with its predetermined
    categories, must have an influence on how we
    perceive the world.

186
The Study of Language (2)
  • Linguistic determinism
  • As we learn a language, the way our language is
    organized will determine how we perceive the
    world being organized.

187
The Study of Language (2)
  • This idea is restated as language determines
    thought, meaning that we can only think in the
    categories provided by our language.

188
The Study of Language (2)
  • The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
  • Edward Sapir and Benjamin Whorf produced
    arguments that the languages of native Americans,
    such as the Hopi, led them to view the world
    differently from those who spoke European
    languages.

189
The Study of Language (2)
  • According to Whorf, the Hopi perceive the world
    differently from other tribes (including the
    English- speaking tribe) because their language
    leads them to do so.

190
The Study of Language (2)
  • Whorf claimed that the Hopi believe that clouds
    and stones are living entities and that it is
    their language that leads them to believe this.
    Unlike Hopi, English does not mark in its grammar
    that clouds and stones are animate.

191
The Study of Language (2)
  • Cognitive categories
  • As a way of analyzing cognition, or how people
    think, we can look at language structure for
    clues, not for causes.

192
The Study of Language (2)
  • - The fact that Hopi speakers inherit a language
    system in which clouds have animate as a feature
    may tell us something about a traditional belief
    system, or way of thinking, that is part of their
    culture and not ours.

193
The Study of Language (2)
  • Classifiers
  • We know about the classification of words in
    languages like Yagua because of grammatical
    markers called classifiers that indicate the type
    or class of noun involved.

194
The Study of Language (2)
  • For example, in Swahili (spoken in east Africa),
    different prefixes are used as classifiers on
    nouns for humans ( wa- ), non-humans (mi-) and
    artifacts ( vi- ) as in watoto, mimea and visu.

195
The Study of Language (2)
  • Social categories
  • Words such as uncle or grandmother, provide
    examples of social categories. These are
    categories of social organization that we can use
    to say how we are connected or related to others.

196
The Study of Language (2)
  • Address terms
  • When a man on the street asks another, Brother,
    can you spare a dollar?, the word brother is
    being used as an address term ( a word or phrase
    for the person being talked or written to.)

197
The Study of Language (2)
  • More typically, an interaction based on an
    unequal relationship will feature address terms
    using a title ( Doctor ) or title plus last name
    ( Professor Bucking-ham ) for the one with higher
    status, and first name only for the one with
    lower status.

198
The Study of Language (2)
  • In many languages, there is a choice between
    pronouns used for addressees who are socially
    close and those who are distant. This is known as
    the T/V distinction, as in the French pronouns tu
    ( close ) and vous ( distant ).

199
The Study of Language (2)
  • Gender
  • There are three uses of the word gender
  • Biological gender
  • Grammatical gender
  • Social gender

200
The Study of Language (2)
  • Biological ( or natural ) gender is the
    distinction in sex between the male and female of
    each species.
  • Grammatical gender is the distinction between
    masculine and feminine, which is used to classify
    nouns in languages such as Spanish ( el sol, La
    luna).

201
The Study of Language (2)
  • 3. Social gender is the distinction we make when
    we use words like man and woman to classify
    individuals in terms of their social roles.

202
The Study of Language (2)
  • Gendered words
  • In Sidamo, spoken in Ethiopia, there are some
    words used only by men and some used only by
    women, so that the translation of milk would be
    ado by a man, but gurda by a woman.

203
The Study of Language (2)
  • These examples simply illustrate that there can
    be differences between the words used by men and
    women in a variety of languages.

204
The Study of Language (2)
  • There are other examples, used to talk about men
    and women, which seem to imply that the words for
    men are normal and the words for women are
    special additions.

205
The Study of Language (2)
  • Paris such as hero-heroine or actor-actress
    illustrate the derivation of terms for the
    womans role from the mans

206
The Study of Language (2)
  • Gendered speech
  • Men typically speak in a lower pitch range
    (80-200 Herz) than women ( 120-400 Herz ).

207
The Study of Language (2)
  • In contemporary American English, there is also
    generally more use of pitch movement, that is,
    more rising and falling intonation.

208
The Study of Language (2)
  • The use of rising intonation at the end of
    statements, the more frequent of hedges and tag
    questions have all been identified as
    characteristic of womens speech.

209
The Study of Language (2)
  • Gendered interaction
  • One effect of the different styles developed by
    men and women is that certain features become
    very salient in cross-gender interactions. In
    this kind of interactions, men are much more
    likely to interrupt women.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com