Term
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Definition
a group of people who are in habitual contact with one another who share a language variety and social conventions or sociolingstic norms about language use |
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Term
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Definition
a way of grouping people by traits that are relatively fixed, such as class, gender, ethnicity, or open to active performance and construction, like identity |
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Term
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Definition
How each of us, as social beings, adapt our language to suit the situation and the audience. Often contasted with social characteristics, the socially relevant traits that we are seen to possess |
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Term
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Definition
a term used when the speaker's choice between forms is completely arbitrary and unpredictable. Opposite to structured variation. |
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Term
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Definition
a term used when the speaker's choice between forms is linked to other factors |
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Term
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Definition
The opposite of probabilistic, categorical rules are absolute, that is, they apply every time they can apply |
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Term
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Definition
the branch of sociology concerned with language (different from socio-lingistics because it does not look at language structure) |
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Term
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Definition
a feature that does not get noticed |
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Term
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Definition
the philosphy or approach that describes how language is represented in the mind |
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Term
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Definition
a distinction drawn by Chomsky that refers primarily to what speakers know about language |
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Term
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Definition
what speakers actually produce when speaking (which might be full of false starts, ums etc) |
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Term
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Definition
the philosphy or approach that knowledge comes through sensory experience |
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Term
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Definition
the codified variety of language, that is, the language taught in school, used in formal writing |
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Term
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Definition
varieties of a language other than the standard |
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Term
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Definition
a non-evaluative approach to language that is focused on how language is actually used, without deciding if it is "right" or "wrong" |
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Term
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Definition
an approach to language that is focused on rules of correctness, that is, how language "should" be used |
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Term
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Definition
if people speaking different varieties can understand each other |
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Term
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Definition
a term that tends to refer to subvarieties of a single language (not always accent) |
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Term
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Definition
the person with whom you are speaking |
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Term
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Definition
degree of intimacy or familiarity between inerlocutors |
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Term
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Definition
the different groups of people that each of us has interacted with over the years |
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Term
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Definition
unit of analysis that looks at a smaller analytical domain than social networks
a community of practice is characterized by mutual engagment, a jointly negoticated enterprise, or shared reperoire |
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Term
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Definition
a combinaion of expressed attitudes and variable linguistic behvaiour shared by all member of a speech community |
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Term
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Definition
a term used to describe the number of connections within a social network
low density = people know a central member
high density = members interact with one another |
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Term
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Definition
social networks in which members have multiple connectios with one another |
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Term
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Definition
the ability of speakers to control what they do and to make conscious choices |
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Term
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Definition
guidelines for how to approach a reseach problem |
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Term
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Definition
people who participate in multiple communities of proactice and bring ideas from one into the other |
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Term
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Definition
a linguistic reseach method based on the quantitative analysis of collections of naturally occuring language data, usually very large |
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Term
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Definition
looks at the sequential organization of conversations and how pariticpants manage the conversation using stategies like turn-taking |
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Term
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Definition
communities that people choose to belong (as opposed to communities of circumstance) |
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Term
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Definition
the process by which the regional features of the speech of a group of people converges toward a common norm over time |
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Term
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Definition
a term used to describe english dialects in which the /r/ following a vowel is pronounced |
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Term
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Definition
a way of identifying vowels using a set of words in which they occur as oppsed to a linguistic symbol |
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Term
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Definition
a pure vowel sound, spoken in a single place of articulation (one no di in dipthong) |
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Term
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Definition
a phonological process found in canadian english in which the vowels are pronounced differently when preceding a voiceless consonant |
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Term
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Definition
a dialect or language can be physically or geographically isolated from others |
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Term
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Definition
when speakers of a dialect or language are cut off from other varieties and have reatined older features, so that their variety has developed differently from their sisten ones |
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Term
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Definition
isolation by conventions or attitudes |
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Term
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Definition
when the pronunciation of a single word becomes a sterotype of a speech community |
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Term
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Definition
a grammatical means of describing a completed event in Irish |
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Term
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Definition
made into a concrete thing |
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Term
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Definition
a process through which a linguistic feature or repertoire becomes a socially recognized register |
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Term
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Definition
a norm or target that speakers unconsciously orient to, with a sort of hidden positive avalutation that speakers give other forms |
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Term
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Definition
a term used to refer to the level "above the local" in which speakers adopt the language features of the nearest large city |
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Term
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Definition
when speakers use language features or linguistic language features or linguistic styles associated with another ethnic group |
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Term
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Definition
the study of regional differences in language |
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Term
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Definition
an acronym for "non-mobile older rural males"
these speakers are believed to have retained the most tradtional sppeech and are consequently the focus of many dialectology studies |
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Term
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Definition
an imaginary boundary or line drawn on a map that seperates particular lingstic features |
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Term
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Definition
many isoglosses occuring in the same area, representing a major dialect boundary |
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Term
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Definition
categorical rules apply every time that they can apply |
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Term
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Definition
the opposite of categorical, probablistic constraints are not absolute but rather tendencies in one direction |
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Term
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Definition
a lignstic factor that governs the use of a particular variant |
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Term
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Definition
a social factor like sex or age that governs the use of a particular variant |
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Term
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Definition
social positions that society assigns to its members or the differences bteween social groups in terms of prestige |
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Term
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Definition
the abstract representation of a source of variation, realized at least two variants |
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Term
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Definition
the different expressions, or actual relization, of a variable
ex. in or ing |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
speaker setting and role they're playing can lead them to use language features associated with a particular class |
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Term
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Definition
people often try to talk like who they want to be |
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Term
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Definition
in formal situations, speakers using prestige variants even more often than the group above them |
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Term
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Definition
when speakers overdo what they see as the linguistic requirments of a situation |
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Term
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Definition
the force hypotheiszed to drive people to use a varieant that is thought to be prestigious or correct |
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Term
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Definition
the importance of standard language in the social and economic life of the speaker |
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Term
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Definition
a variable that speakers are less aware of than a sterotype but whose use they can control is style shifting |
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Term
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Definition
a variable that can show differences by age or social group and i often associated with particular characteristics but is not subect to style shifting |
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Term
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Definition
the ability to move between scoial classes, often dtermined by how defined class roles are in a particular culture |
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Term
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Definition
in societies where mobility is more difficult and lingusitic boundaries are more rigid, social groups, or castes, tend to be fixed |
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Term
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Definition
an approach to language that is focused on rules of correctness (the way language should be) |
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Term
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Definition
a subset of language used by a particular social group or class |
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Term
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Definition
posative or negative assessments of variants that are in line with the dominant norms associated with sounding "proper" and that people are aware of |
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Term
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Definition
a norm or target that speaker unconsciously orient to with a sort of hidden positive availuation that speaker sgive to other forms |
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Term
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Definition
a term used in creole studies to refer to the most creole-like variety |
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Term
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Definition
based on the assumptioon that people's basic grammar changes very little during adulthood, apparent time studies compare speakers of different ages in a particular community and use this information to descrube change over time. thus, if older speakers are different from younger speakers, it is assumed that this is because change has taken place in the community |
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Term
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Definition
the idea that general properties of language and language change have been the same throughout history and we are thus able to look at changes going on today and assume that the same kind of forces were at play in the past |
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Term
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Definition
determining the particular combinations of social and linguistic behaviors in which change happens |
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Term
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Definition
determining why a particular linguistic change happens when it does |
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Term
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Definition
when differences between age groups repeat as each generation ages, that is, when all speakers in a particular community favor a particular variant at one age and then a different variant at another |
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Term
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Definition
a study that sampels a speech community at two or more points in time |
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Term
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Definition
a collection of maps of a given area that show the distributio of various linguistic features |
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Term
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Definition
a real time study that looks at the same members of a speech community at two (or more) points in the (for example 20 years) |
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Term
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Definition
a real time study that studies different members of a speech community at different times (examples taking people who are 20, 40 and 60 now and different people of the same ages later on) |
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Term
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Definition
the observation that some variants are actually most used by adolescents, not by the youngest group |
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Term
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Definition
varioation without change; when multiple variants survive for a long period, without one replacing the other |
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Term
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Definition
an idnviduals speech changes according to differences in interloators, social context, personal goals, and external factors |
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Term
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Definition
a form of address expressing respect and esteem |
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Term
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Definition
the importance of standard language in the social and economic life of the speaker |
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Term
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Definition
an ethinic variety of a language or dialect |
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Term
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Definition
when people use a feature associated with their ethinic group even less often than non-members of the group |
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Term
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Definition
a distinctly bounded geographic area in which many residents share a ethnicity or social characteristic |
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Term
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Definition
a name or term for an ethnic group |
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Term
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Definition
changing your speech style to sound more like the people you are speaking with |
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Term
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Definition
the ability of speakers to control what they do to make consious choices |
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Term
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Definition
the idea that gender differences in language reflect different cultures of converstaion |
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Term
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Definition
the idea that gender differences in language reflect differences in accesss to power |
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Term
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Definition
using language to build and maintain relationships |
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Term
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Definition
usuing language to communicate factual information |
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Term
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Definition
a linguistic feature directly indexes something with social meaning when it is categoical and exclusive
ex. he to refer to a man |
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Term
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Definition
a linguistic feature indirectly indexes something with social meaning when it is not categorically associated with that meaning, but rather is linked to another meaning that is iteself liked to that social meaning |
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Term
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Definition
Labovs principle I, Ia, and II
the idea that women are more likel to use standard forms and lead in changes from above, but are also leaders in changes from below, which are not necessarily toward higher prestige forms |
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Term
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Definition
a word borrowed from traditional grammar that in this field suggests that theres an active doer or chooser at work |
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Term
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Definition
the idea that actions and speech acquire constituative force and are used to create particular gender identity |
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Term
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Definition
a term used to refer to situations involving same-sex groups or relations that are non-sexual, such as fraternities, prisons etc |
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Term
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Definition
when people adopt behaviours from another group in order to be taken as authentic members of the group |
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Term
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Definition
when people use features that both they and their audience know are associated with another group |
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Term
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Definition
the institionalization of hetersexuality and tradtional gender |
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Term
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Definition
an examination of the structure of a converstation, looking for linguistic regularities |
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Term
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Definition
an extended language interaction that is longer than a sentence |
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Term
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Definition
language as it is actually used or recorded |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
a group of people who are in habitual contact with one another, who share a language variety and social conventions, or sociolinguistics norms, about language use |
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Term
|
Definition
A way of grouping people by traits that are relatively fixed, such as class, gender, or ethnicity, or open to active performance and constriction, like identity |
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Term
|
Definition
How each of us, as social beings, adapt our language to suit the situation and the audience, (Often contrasted with social characteristics) |
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Term
|
Definition
A term used when the speaker's choice between forms is completely arbritrary and unpredictable |
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Term
|
Definition
A term used when the speaker's choice between forms is linked to other factors (more of a choice) |
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Term
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Definition
The opposite of probabilistic, categorical rules are absolute, that is, they apply every time |
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Term
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Definition
Explores the ways in which society influences a speaker's idiolect (macro focuses on society as a whole) |
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Term
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Definition
The branch of sociology concerned with language. This approach studies the social contexts of language without recource to analysis of linguistic structure |
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Term
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Definition
A very noticeable and often-discussed linguistic element. |
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Term
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Definition
A linguistic feature that does not get noticed. |
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Term
Who is considered to be the founder of modern sociolinguistics? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
The philosophy or approach that that describes how language is represented in the mind |
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Term
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Definition
A distinction drawn by Chompskythat refers primarily to what speakers know about language |
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Term
How does micro-sociolinguistics differ from macro-sociolinguistics? |
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Definition
Micro looks at the individual and macro looks at society as a whole |
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Term
What concerns variationist sociolinguists? |
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Definition
look at the correlations between language variation and social and linguistic characteristics |
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Term
What are some reasons for the growth of sociolinguistics in the 1960s and 1970s? |
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Definition
-The ability to record speech electronically -interest in Social Issues -Modernist view - science can fix this |
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Term
Why are sociolinguists interested in the speech of women and young people more than in the speech of men and old people? |
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Definition
They are Brokers of change |
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Term
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Definition
What speakers actually produce when speaking |
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Term
Which groups generally use unmarked forms? |
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Definition
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Term
Which groups are associated with marked forms? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
The philosophy that we only trust evidence that we find out there in the real world (knowledge is a sensory experience) |
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Term
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Definition
Research that counts or measures stuff Usually looks at frequencies of use and statistical tests of correlations between linguistic behaviour etc |
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Term
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Definition
The codified variety of a language; language taught in schools, used in formal writing etc |
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Term
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Definition
varieties of language other than the standard |
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Term
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Definition
a non-evaluative approach to language that is focused on how language is actually used (without deciding right and wrong) |
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Term
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Definition
how language "should" be used |
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Term
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Definition
if people speaking different varieties can understand each other, their varieties are mutually intelligible |
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Term
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Definition
a term that tends to refer to a sub-variety of language |
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Term
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Definition
the person with whom you are speaking |
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Term
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Definition
degree of intimacy or familiarity between interlocutors |
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Term
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Definition
a branch of anthropology that deals with the scientific description of individual cultures |
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Term
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Definition
The different groups of people that each of us has interacted with over the years |
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Term
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Definition
characterized by mutual engagement, a jointly negotiated enterprise, and shared repertoire |
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Term
|
Definition
a combination of expressed attitudes and variable linguistic behaviour shared by all members of a speech community |
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Term
|
Definition
a term used to describe the number of connections within a social network |
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|
Term
|
Definition
a term used to describe social networks in which members have multiple connections with one another |
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|
Term
|
Definition
the process by which the regional features of the speech of a group of people converge toward a common norm over time |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The ability of speakers to control what they do and to make conscious choices |
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Term
|
Definition
guidelines for how to approach a research problem |
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Term
|
Definition
people who participate in multiple communities of practice and bring ideas from one into the the other |
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Term
|
Definition
a linguistic research method based on quantative analysis of collections of naturally occurring language data *usually very large |
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Term
|
Definition
usually smaller scale intensive research, that aims to study meaning and motivation |
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Term
|
Definition
a method that looks at the sequential organization of conversation and how participants manage the conversation using strategies |
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Term
|
Definition
a term used to describe English dialects in which the /r/ following a vowel is pronounced |
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Term
|
Definition
a way of identifying vowels using a set of words in which they occur as opposed to a linguistic symbol |
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Term
|
Definition
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Term
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Definition
A phonological process found in Canadian English our vowels are raised in comparison to the americans |
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Term
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Definition
Physical linguistic - when speakers of a dialect or language are cut so that it develops differently from another sister Social |
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Term
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Definition
when the pronunciation of a single word becomes a stereotype of a speech community |
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Term
|
Definition
a grammatical means of describing completed event in Irish - I'm after doing - |
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Term
|
Definition
a process through which a linguistic feature becomes socially recognized |
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Term
|
Definition
a term used to refer to the level "above local" in which speakers adopt the language features of the nearest city |
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Term
|
Definition
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Term
|
Definition
Non-mobile older rural males |
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Term
|
Definition
an imaginary boundary or line drawn on a map that separates particular linguistic features |
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|
Term
|
Definition
many isoglosses occurring in the same area - likely representing a major dialect boundary |
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Term
|
Definition
the abstract representation of a source of variation gonna and will are variants of the variable future temporal reference |
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Term
|
Definition
speakers setting and role that they are playing can lead them to use language features associated with a particular class |
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Term
|
Definition
are absolute, they apply every-time |
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Term
Probabilistic Constraints |
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Definition
are not absolute but rather tendencies in one direction |
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Term
|
Definition
a linguistic feature that governs the choice of a particular variant |
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Term
|
Definition
social positions that society assigns to its members |
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Term
|
Definition
variants that have higher prestige |
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|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
in formal situations, speakers using prestige variants even more often that the group above them |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
when speakers overdo what they see as the linguistic requirements of a situation |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the force hypothesized to drive people to use a variant that is thought to be prestigious or correct and that is not part of their own casual speech |
|
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Term
|
Definition
the importance of standard language in the social and economic life of the speakers |
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Term
|
Definition
a very noticeable variant |
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Term
|
Definition
that is socially marked, very noticeable and often discussed |
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Term
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Definition
A linguistic form that shows an effect, not just of social group, but of style or register |
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Term
sociolinguistic indicator |
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Definition
A linguistic form that has a closed set of variants, such that Variant A is used by every member of speech community X, under all register demands, while Variant B is used by ever member of speech community Y; categorical |
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Term
|
Definition
the ability to move between social classes, often determined by how defined class roles are in a particular culture |
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Term
|
Definition
in societies where mobility is more difficult and linguistic boundaries are more rigid - social groups or castes tend to be fixed |
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Term
|
Definition
rules that tell people how they should speak |
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Term
|
Definition
rules that actually do apply |
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Term
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Definition
a subset of language used by a particular social group or class |
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Term
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Definition
variants associated with higher status groups overt - people are aware of it covert - people are not aware of it |
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Term
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Definition
grammatical constructions that are short, simple and often unfinished |
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Term
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Definition
grammatical constructions that are long, complex and often include unnecessary words |
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Term
|
Definition
Based on the assumption that peoples basic grammar changes very little during adulthood Studies compare speakers of different ages and use the information to describe change over time |
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Term
|
Definition
when differences between age groups repeat as each generation ages |
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Term
Real time studies (2 types) |
|
Definition
trend - looking at people 20, 40 and 60 now and looking at a new poeple of 20 40 and 60 ten years from now panel study - looking at the same people 10 years from now |
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Term
|
Definition
the idea that general properties of language and language change have been the same throught history and we are thus able to look at the changes going on today and assume that the same kind of forces were at play in the past |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
determining the particular combinations of social and linguistic behaviours in which change happens |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Change from above - noticed and introduced from the dominant class Change from below - not noticed and introduced from any class |
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Term
|
Definition
determining why a particular linguistic change happens when it does |
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Term
|
Definition
the observation that some variants are actually most used by adolescent, not by the youngest group |
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Term
|
Definition
|
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Term
|
Definition
an individuals speech changes according to differences in interlocutors, social context, personal goals, or external factors |
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Term
|
Definition
the institutionalization of heterosexuality and traditional gender |
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Term
|
Definition
Great Vowel Shift - Took place in England between 1450 and 1750 involving the raising and dipthonganation of most vowels Northern Cities Shift - Canadian Shift |
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Term
|
Definition
a method that focuses on the similarities and differences between varieties |
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Term
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Definition
a teaching method in which students who speak one language are taught content in another language by teachers |
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Term
Structured immersion programs |
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Definition
where students who don't speak the dominant language are taught that language and taught in that language |
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Term
|
Definition
a language that is acquired by individuals raised in homes where the region's dominant language is not spoken |
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Term
|
Definition
where o language are used for instruction for fairly long period |
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Term
|
Definition
an ethnic variety of a language or dialect |
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Term
|
Definition
when people use a feature associated with their ethic group even less often than non members of the group |
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Term
|
Definition
In 1979 a group of parents from Ann Arbor sued the Michigan Board of Education for not taking dialect into account in their children’s educations, and they won. |
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Term
|
Definition
a distinctly bounded geographic area in which many resident share an ethnicity or other social characteristic |
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Term
|
Definition
In 1996, the Oakland School Board (California) passed a resolution stating the AAVE was to be recognized as ‘the primary language of African American children’ and as such, it would be a factor in Language Arts lessons. |
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Term
|
Definition
a term from social sciences that emphasizes that Whiteness, like other ethnic characteristics is marked and nameable. |
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Term
|
Definition
African American Vernacular English |
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Term
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Definition
The ability of speakers to control what they do and to make conscious choices |
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Term
|
Definition
The idea that gender differences in language reflect cultures of conversation |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The idea that gender differences in language reflect differences in access to power |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
using language to build and maintain relationships |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
using language to communicate factual information |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a linguistic feature directly indexes something with social meaning when it is categorical and exclusive (he refers to man |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a language feature indirectly indexes something with social meaning when it is not categorically associated with meaning but rather is linked to another meaning that is itself linked to tat social meaning |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
emerging from Labov - the idea that women are more likely to use standard forms and lead in changes from above but also leaders in change from below the level of awareness |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a word borrowed from traditional grammar that suggests that theres an active doer or chooser at work |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a term used to refer to situations involving same-sex groups or relationships that are non-sexual, such as fraternities |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
when people adopt behaviours from another group in order to be taken as authentic members of that group |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
from gender studies: when people use features that both they and their audience know are associated with another group |
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Who pioneered research in language and gender? What were the claims? |
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Lakoff - that womens speech is different than mens |
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What two styles did Tannen identify? Who uses each and what is the purpose of each? |
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women rapport men rapport women relationships men hierarchy and independence |
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intra-speaker variation as opposed to variation across groups (each person has their own style) |
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within the speaker: the difference in the way a single speaker talks in two or more situations |
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paralinguistic channel cues |
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cues (pitch, volume, breathing rate, and laughter) that seem to correlate with casual speech |
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proposes that speakers style shift on the basis of who they are speaking with or who might overhear them |
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trying to sound more like the people you are talking to |
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trying to sound less like the people you are talking to |
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a variable that speakers are less aware of than a stereotype but whose use they can control in style shifting |
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below the radar meaning that can show differences by age or social group and is often associated with particular characteristics |
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a variable where there's more variation within an individual, across styles than there is between individuals of different social backgrounds |
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a variety of language used in a particular social or economic setting (ex legal) |
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a category of language use recognized and usually named by the speech community - sermon, Sci-fi |
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association with a particular occupation or activity: often develops its own special vocabulary |
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a specialized type of slang: thieves talk |
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avoiding linguistic features associated with another social group |
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true/simultaneous bilingualism |
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takes place when a child becomes bilingual by learning two languages from birth. |
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by first learning one language and then another |
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refers to the situation when a bilingual understands more than one language but speaks only one of them. |
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a language has been forgotten |
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asymmetrical bilingualism |
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a bilingual situation in which the less powerful linguistic groups are expected to adopt the language of the powerful group in order to access education or government |
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a situation in which different language varieties co-exist in a speech community Latin for law german for school |
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multilingualism (2 types) |
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societal - when multiple languages co-exist in a community unstable - temporary or fleeting instances of social multilingualism |
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situational - us constrained by the social context metaphorical - is used as a sociolinguistic resource |
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free morpheme - switching can't happen between bound morphemes equivalence -switching tends to happen where the sentence structure just before and just after the switch are possible in both languages involved |
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individual words from another language that are inserted, but often change to involve the rules of the matrix language |
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when speakers of a language or language variety interact with speakers of a different language or language variety |
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when a particular language doesn't have a word for a particular concept (and thus usually adopts a word) |
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when a borrowed word is changed so that it haves like a word from our language |
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a change in a words form based on a mistaken understanding of its meaning or composition |
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a group of languages that have become more similar because of geographical proximity |
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a language that shares components of two or more languages, generally in equal proportions |
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a language that is stripped down to the essentials not spoken as a first language |
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part of the relexification hypothesis, this is the template language into which the actual words of different lexifier languages are slotted |
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the language that supplies most of the vocabulary for a pidgin or a creole |
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a language variety that develops out of pidgin |
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relexification hypothesis |
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the argument that similarities among creoles arise because creoles all over the world have developed from a single template language, which acted as a sort of structural frame in which the actual words of different languages are slotted |
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language bioprogram hypothesis |
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the argument that similarities among creoles arise because all children have access to an innate biological program that leads them to restructure the very basic input of each pidgin in the same way |
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a variety that has influenced the structure or use of another, more dominant variety |
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a reduction in the number of creole features in the speech of an individual or community |
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a term used in creole studies to refer to the most creole-like variety, that is the most distant from acrolect |
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a term used in creole studies to refer to the least creole-like or most standard or prestigious variety |
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a term used in creole studies to refer to the intermediate variety between basilect and acrolect |
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sub varieties of creoles fall along a continuum |
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a scale or ordering that implies that a features associated with a particular point will also be associated with all points to one side of it |
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a test designed to gauge unexpressed language attitudes by asking subjects to rate recorded speakers on a scale according to trails like social class, intelligence, and friendliness; however, speakers are listening to the same speaker or speakers several times, using different accents or speaking different languages |
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closeness or intimacy or shared status |
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a scale often used in questionnaires, usually to let respondents indicate how much they agree with or accept a particular statement |
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widely held beliefs about language |
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language subordination process |
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From lippi-green: the process by which some language varieties are built up and others are put down |
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accommodation towards your interlocutors, that is trying to sound more like the people you're talking to |
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an extended language interaction that is longer than a sentence |
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socially learned ways of being that are so ingrained that we don't notice them |
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critical discourse analysis (CDA) |
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the underling assumption of this practice is that texts promote or reproduce ideologies and that people can be trained to critically read these texts to be aware of what these texts are doing to them |
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the non-standard spellings to represent pronunciation of individual words that match those of almost all english speakers |
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the language used by oppositional subcultures within a society, usually used to reverse or twist standard meaning for social or political ends |
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the studying of how languages survive or the continuing use of a language in the face of a more regionally, socially, or politically dominant language |
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refers to the goals underling the language planning process |
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conscious efforts by government, society, organizations etc to affect the role and status of languages |
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Rooted in the social psychology of language, this term refers to how widely a language or variety associated with a particular or culture or ethnicity is spoken |
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the gradual replacement of one language by another as the primary language of communication and socialization within a speech community |
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a complete language shift in which the original language is no longer used by anyone, anywhere |
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the social or institutional context of language use |
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a theory about language and thought that argues that the way a particular language describes the world actually affects its speakers view of reality |
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a type of language planning concerned with choosing between available languages or language varieties and promoting one over another, often including the declaration of an official language |
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a language declared the language of a particular region or country as a result of legalization |
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a type of language planning concerned with the internal structure of the language, which choosing between available variants within that language in order to build up a language to the point it can be used for all the requirements of a modern society |
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creating new words, often through compounding |
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How does a national language differ from an official language? What characterizes each? |
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a national language is one that is just widely spoken |
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How has the nature and demographics of bilingualism in the Basque country changed in the last 20 years? |
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Bilingualism incorperated into schools -not just french |
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What is the status of Swahili in Tanzania? What affect has the status of Swahili had on other indigenous languages? Why? |
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Definition
It is the lingua franca of East Africa It has made other languages not as important |
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By what means has the Samoan community in Australia been successful in achieving long-term language maintenance? |
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Definition
Churches use the Samoan words when possible instead of replacing them with bibilical words |
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What characterizes a moribund language? |
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a language that is so close to dead that it is inevitable |
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