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Ch. 7 Language Variation

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Regional varieties of the same language ... tire [tar], fire [far], five [fav], guide [gad] Canadian raising /aI/, /aw/ /a/ /? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 7 Language Variation


1
Ch. 7 Language Variation
  • Introduction to English Linguistics
  • Jungtae Kim, Ph.D.
  • 2008.05.25

2
Language variation
  • Definition
  • Regional varieties of the same language
  • Social, ethnic and gender-related varieties of
    the same language,
  • Stylistic varieties of the same language
  • See the seven examples in p. 134

3
Language Universals, Languages, Dialects, and
Idiolects
  • Language universals
  • See Figure 7.1 Domains of language study, by
    groups of speakers
  • Mutually intelligible

4
Regional Variation
  • Regional varieties of a language result from a
    number of political, geographical, and cultural
    factors.
  • Linguistic heritage
  • Migration routes
  • Political and ecclesiastical divisions
  • See Dialect atlases in Figure 7.2 and 7.3, 7.4,
    7.5
  • You need to know the Figures indicating
    regional variation in the same language!
  • Isogloss
  • Upper Midwest darning needles for dragonfly
  • Lower Midwest snake feeder, crawl in
    Nebraska and Southern Iowa

5
Regional Lexical Variation
  • Lexical variation vocabulary variation
  • Northern and Southern varieties
  • See the e.gs., in p. 141
  • Northern U.S. Vs. Southern U.S.
  • U.S. Vs. Canada
  • See the e.g., in p. 142 U.S. English vs. British
    English

6
Regional Phonological Variation
  • Linking r
  • Eastern New England and NY city
  • a vowel-vowel sequence between words is
    linked with an r
  • e.g, That idea is crazy. (idear)
  • Consonant epenthesis a consonant is inserted
    to break up a series of two vowels
  • Vowel epenthesis athlete
  • Vowel neutralization before nasals
  • Sourthern idalects - / /, / / ? I before a
    nasal consonant
  • neutralization or merger pen vs. pin

7
  • Vocalization
  • in the deep South, substitutes for
    post-vocalic liquid /l/, /r/
  • there / / ? / /
  • Voicing assimilation
  • greasy ? s in the North, z in the South
  • In the Southern Dialect, s assimilates the
    voicing of the adjacent vowels to yield z
  • Monophthongization of /aI/
  • Monophthong /a, e, i, o, u,/, Dipthong
    /aw, ay, ey, ow,../
  • tire ? tar, fire? far, five ? fav,
    guide ? gad

8
  • Canadian raising
  • /aI/, /aw/ /a/ ? /?/
  • fight /faIt/ ? /f ? It/, out /out/ ? / ? ut/
  • Stress
  • British vs. American English pronunciations
  • See the e.gs., in p. 145

9
Social Variation
  • Sociolinguistics concerned with the
    interrelationship between the language of a group
    and its social characteristics socioeconomic
    status and ethnicity
  • Working class New Yorkers delete post-vocalic
    r forty-four
  • Several trends during the late 1950s and early
    960s
  • Social variables age and education
  • Listeners making social judgments based on
    characteristics of a speakers dialect standard
    vs. nonstandard dialects
  • e.g., socially marked forms aint
  • 3. African American Vernacular English (AAVE)
  • e.g., tap faucet,
  • Cant nobody tell him what to do.
    Nobody can tell him what to do
  • these

10
  • A Creole is a language that develops from a
    pidgin, a linguistic system used when speakers of
    different languages come into contact through
    trade or colonization.
  • Pidgin
  • The difference between a linguistic judgment and
    a sociological one himself, hisself, heself

11
Nonstandard Phonological Variation
  • Substitution of d instead of
  • this, that, these, those working-class
    sections of NY city
  • / /, / / are very close in their places of
    articulation
  • Consonant cluster reduction
  • CCR deletes a consonant from a series of two
    or more word-final consonants
  • e.g., iced tea /aIst Ti/ ? /aIs ti/

12
Nonstandard Morphological variation
  • Reflexive Pronouns
  • e.g., hisself, theirselves
  • Omission of Final s on Verbs
  • e.g., He walk home every day.
  • Other Nonstandard Verb Patterns
  • I seed him yesterday.
  • I seen him yesterday.
  • Ive saw him three times this week.
  • be to one single form
  • I is, You is, We is, They is

13
Nonstandard Syntactic Variation
  • Inversion in wh-Interrogatives
  • See the e.g., in p. 157
  • What is it? Vs. What it is?
  • Double Negatives
  • e.g., I dont have no money. ? I dont have
    any money.
  • From 18th century prescriptive grammar
  • Nonstandard Treatments of to be
  • be-deletion
  • Hes looking for work. ? He looking for work.
  • Her hair is messed up ? Her hair messed up.

14
  • e.g., in p. 158
  • AAVE It is his. ? It his.
  • Do they be sick?
  • Do they be at work?
  • Habitual be distributive be

15
Language and Gender
  • Gender the social, psychological roles,
    attitudes, and traits associated with biological
    sex
  • Gender as a Social Variable
  • Upper middle class vs. lower-working class
  • He dont
  • Lower-working class women
  • Standard form women men in NY city

16
Gender Patterns within Standard English
  • Womens language mens language
  • tag questions,
  • hedges(sort of, you know, I guess),
  • question intonation on declarative structures,
  • indirect speech acts,
  • euphemisms (e.g., power room for toilet),
  • empty adjectives and intensifiers (that is
    SUCH an ADORABLE puppy),
  • specialized vocabularies in domains such as
    color terms (magenta, periwinkle shades of
    purple, blue)
  • See Figure 7.6 Substitution of aint for other
    verb forms during casual conversation

17
Stylistic Variation
  • Systematic variations within the language of any
    one speaker, depending upon the occasion and the
    participants in the interchange.
  • Different styles
  • Registers on a job interview
  • Linguistic style is a matter of what is
    appropriate

18
Stylistic Lexical Variation
  • Varying from one situation to another is
    vocabulary
  • Thank you for your consideration. Vs. Thank
    you for your time.
  • However, therefore, thus but, so
  • Informal register
  • let the cat out of the bag, kick the bucket,
    make the grade, give me a break
  • canine dog, thermal heat, dental tooth,
    lexical word

19
Stylistic Phonological Variation
  • Neutralization rules obliterate the distinction
    between segments
  • Deletion rules
  • Suppressed full pronunciation
  • Latter /t/, ladder /d/, affect, effect
  • Deletion of unstressed syllables
  • remember, hypercorrect pronunciations
    elementary, mathematics

20
Stylistic Morphological Variation
  • Contraction
  • Im, youre, hell, Ill,
  • Clipped form
  • Psych psychology, econ economics, comp
    lit comparative literature, sports fanatic

21
Stylistic Syntactic Variation
  • Changes in syntax in register
  • e.g, In which department will I be working?
  • For whom do you work? __ Whom do you
    work for? ? who do you work for?
  • Omission in interrogatives
  • Do you want another drink? ? You want another
    drink? ? What another drink?
  • Appropriateness
  • Who did you speak to?
  • To whom did you speak?
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