Language, Dialect, and Varieties
Language, Dialect, and Varieties
Language, Dialect, and Varieties
VARIETIES
Language variation
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Varietie
•
s
Wardaugh (1988: 20)
a specific set of linguistic items or human speech
patterns (presumably, sounds, words, grammatical
features) which we can uniquely associate with some
external factors (presumably, a geographical area and
a social group)
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Factors that contribute to variation
• Social situation
• Occupation
• Age
• Geography
• Education
• Gender
• Social status/class
• Ethnicity
Facts about dialects
• All languages consist of dialects (a language is a
group of dialects; to speak a language is to
speak a dialect of that language)
• Therefore, everyone speaks at least one dialect
• Dialect differences are usually minor and
dialects of a language are usually mutually
intelligible
• Dialects are geographically, socially, politically
determined
Facts about dialects
Dialect variation is a matter of difference, not
deficit.
Nonstandard dialects are “self-contained”
systems, with their regular phonological and
syntactic rules.
Nonstandard dialects of English are close
relatives to SE, sometimes reflecting older
forms of SE.
Language vs. Dialect
Language (prestige) and dialect (stigma)
The stigmatization of the term dialect
1. I don’t speak dialect
2. in reality, all speakers of English speak some dialect,
regardless of its social status.
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LANGUAGE AND DIALECT
• What is the difference between language and
dialect?
• Variety is a term used for to replace both
terms
- Hudson says “a set of linguistic items with
similar distribution”
• Variety is some linguistic shared items which
can uniquely be associated with some social
items
Everybody speaks a dialect
Accent → differences in pronunciation between one
variety of a language and another
Dialect
1. a variety of language used by a group whose
linguistic habit pattern both reflect and are
determined by shared regional, social, or cultural
perspectives.
2. all the differences between varieties of a
language, those in pronunciation,
word
usage, syntax, and variation of the given
community.
3. to apply to all varieties, not just to non-standard
varieties 12
Kinds of dialect
1. Regional dialect
2. Social dialect
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Social dialects
Factors such as occupation, place of
residence, education, income, racial or ethnic
origin, cultural background, caste, religion
related to the way people speak.
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Social dialects: examples
e.g.
1. Caste in India often determines which variety of a
language a speaker use.
2. Christian, Muslim and Jewish in Baghdad speak
different variety of Arabic.
3. Ethnic group in America, e.g. Labov’s work in
NY.
4. Speakers of Jewish and Italian ethnicity
differentiated from the standard variety or Black
English.
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Regional Dialect
Very distinctive local varieties → regional dialect
1. It is reflected in the differences in pronunciation, in
the choice and forms of words, and in syntax.
2. There is a dialect continuum.
3. Various pressures-political, social, cultural, and
educational- serve to harden current national
boundaries an to make the linguistic differences
among states
4. Dialect geography → term → used to describe
attempts made to map the distributions of various
linguistic features
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Accent
• Dialect must not be confused with ‘accent’. Standard
English is spoken in a variety of accents. RP is the
English accent that has achieved certain eminence.
a. associated with a higher social or educational
background
b. most commonly taught to students EFL
c. other names for this accents: the queen’s
English, Oxford English, BBC English.
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Why do some dialects have more prestige
than others?
Some dialects have more prestige
1. Historical factors
2. Other factors
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Dialect: Prestige and Stigma
• A prestige variety is a dialect associated with
mainstream social prestige – for example a
dialect that sounds “educated” or
“sophisticated”
Standard language
1. Variety of English, used in print, taught in schools to non-native
speakers.
2. Spoken by educated people & used in news broadcast.
3. The centralization of English political and commercial life at
London
4. Gave the prominence over other dialects
Standard English →widely codified grammar & vocabulary
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Standard language
1. A small number of regional differences
2. Standard Scottish ≠ standard English
English ≠ American standard
British : I have
got American : I have
English : It needs washing
gotten
: It needs washed
Scottish
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Speech Community
A speech community is a group of people who share a set of
rules and norms for communication and interpretation of
speech.