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Ch. 5 Vocab
22

Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Dec 29, 2015

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Page 1: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Ch. 5 Vocab

Page 2: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Standard Language

Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communicationSig: as with English, it doesn’t have to be the official language by law

Page 3: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Dialect

Def: a regional variety of a language distinguished by vocabulary, spelling, and pronunciationSig: If isolated enough it may diverge into a separate language

Page 4: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Mutual Intelligibility

Def: the ability of two people to understand each other when talkingSig: it determines whether they are speaking two dialects or different languages

Page 5: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Extinct Language

Def: a language that was once used by people in daily activities but is no longer usedEx: Latin and Cornish

Page 6: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Backward (Reverse) Reconstruction

Def: the tracking of sound shifts and hardening consonants “backward” toward the original languageEx: English: father (newest), Dutch: vader, German: vater (oldest)

Page 7: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Language Divergence & Convergence

Convergence: the combining of 2 languages into one b/c of interaction Divergence: the splitting of one language into two b/c of isolation

Page 8: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Gimbutas Hypothesis

Def: theory on how Indo-European spread throughout EurasiaHearth: above Caspian Sea (4k b.c.)How: conquest by horseback by the Kurgans

Page 9: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Renfrew Hypothesis

Def: theory on how Indo-European spread throughout EurasiaHearth: Anatolia (Turkey), 6,700 b.c.How: through the diffusion of agriculture

Page 10: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Lingua franca

• a language used among speakers of different speakers for the purpose of trade and commerce• Ex: Bazaar Malay (pidgin) & English

Page 11: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Pidgin

• combination of 2 or more languages to allow communication across language groups• Simplified structure and vocabulary (no native speakers)

Page 12: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Creole language

• a pidgin language that developed a more complex structure and vocabulary & has become a native language• Ex: Belizean Creole

Page 13: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Monoligual States

Def: countries in which one language is spoken (e.g. South Korea)Sig: less common due to migration

Page 14: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Should Also Knows

Page 15: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Dialect Chain

Def: a string of dialects in which the dialects nearest to each other at any place in the chain are most closely relatedSig: dialects on opposite ends may no longer be mutually intelligible

Page 16: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Sino-Tibetan Family

• Family that includes Mandarin Chinese (845 million native speakers)• Second largest language family (21%)

Page 17: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Ideograms

• Def: a graphic symbol that represents a concept or idea• Ex: Chinese characters

Page 18: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Ebonics

• Def: African American vernacular English (non-standard English)

Page 19: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Esperanto

• Def: easy to learn, politically neutral language created to help people of different languages communicate•Sig: relatively few native speakers

Page 20: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Franglais/Spanglish

• Def: a combination, or interlanguage, between French/English and Spanish/English

Page 21: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Monoglot/polyglot

• Def: monolingual/multilingual

Page 22: Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.

Toponym

• Def: place names• Sig: they can help us see migration patterns (e.g. New England & San Francisco)