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Language and Dialect
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Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Language and Dialect

Page 2: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Language vs. Dialect

“A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.”

Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which is perceived as closest to the STANDARD form used in writing.

As Ottenheimer notes, we often think of dialects of a language as being mutual intelligible with one another (speakers of each dialect can understand speakers of the other dialects and vice versa)

Page 3: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Dialects (Varieties)

A dialect is a regionally or socially distinctive variety of a language, identified by a particular set of words (vocabulary) and grammatical structures, as well as a certain phonology.

To avoid the stigma of “dialect,” most linguists use the word “linguistic variety” instead

Page 4: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Prestige and Stigma

• A prestige variety is a dialect associated with mainstream social prestige – for example a dialect that sounds “educated” or “sophisticated”

• A stigmatized variety is a dialect associated with negative features, from a mainstream social perspective: e.g. “uneducated” “lower class”

Page 5: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Negative prestige

A negative prestige variety is one that is associated with negative social value, but also carries a lot of prestige in certain social groups.

Example: Male speakers of certain regional dialects (North End Boston) are often considered “extra-masculine” within their social group

Page 6: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Language Attitudes

Language attitudes are attitudes about language.

Examples include: beautiful, ignorant, lazy, logical, clear, melodious, primitive, precise, passive, forceful etc.

What are some of the stereotypes we relate to different dialects in the US?

Page 7: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.
Page 8: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Language and cultural differences

communicative practices are habitual language practices groups of people use to communicate with each other and to create and maintain distinct groups/identities

Example: use of rising intonation in Southern dialects of English.

http://classweb.gmu.edu/accent/english45.html

Page 9: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Language is not homogenous!

Language isn’t now and never was homogenous, that is, the same across all speakers, regions or situations.

In fact, variation across speakers or groups of speakers is part of the reason why language change occurs

Page 10: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

One language One Culture

Speakers of the same language may still differ in important ways in terms of their norms and expectations for language use.

This might include:• Accent (pronunciation of words)• Word meanings• Appropriate speech in different situations• Paralinguistic rules (gaze, gesture etc.)• Proxemics• Other community- or group-based

conventions/expectations

Page 11: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Speech CommunityA speech community is a group of people who share a

set of rules and norms for communication and interpretation of speech.

“Rules and norms” includes everything from intonation and vocabulary, to body positioning and eye contact

Ottenheimer pg. 94 – “A speech community is a group of people who share one or more varieties of language and the rules for using those varieties in everyday communication.”

Page 12: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

The idea of a speech community allows us to do two things:

1) Focus on a smaller social unit than all the speakers of a language.

2) Get away from the idea that one language = one culture

Can we belong to more than one speech community?

Page 13: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Competence

Communicative competence refers to what we know when we really know a language. It means that we can recognize and use a broad range of registers, and that we know the meanings of different communicative practices used by most people in a given speech community.

Page 14: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Ethnography of SpeakingThe ethnography of speaking focuses on

describing features of different speech communities:

• includes descriptions of explicit norms for communication

• details verbal, nonverbal and social expectations surrounding interaction

• focuses on particular contexts and types of

speech events, and how language changes in different situations

Page 15: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Members of a speech community SHARE ideas about appropriate conduct in different speech situations

When two people come from different speech communities and don’t share ideas about appropriate conduct, miscommunication often occurs.

Page 16: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Miscommunication

miscommunication - a misinterpretation of intended meaning; failure to achieve communication

Miscommunication occurs all the time within speech communities, but across speech communities miscommunication often occurs at regular points where rules and norms are different in the two communities

Page 17: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Bailey article

• Example of ethnography of communication

• About miscommunication across ethnic lines

• Focuses on interactional styles – the basic ways people organize their interactions with one another based on expectations for those interactions

Page 18: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Politeness strategies or styles

• involvement strategy express approval and emphasizes solidarity (African-American)

• restraint strategy emphasizes unwillingness to impose on others (Korean)

Page 19: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Social Consequences of Miscommunication

• Each side engages in “inappropriate” behavior by the standards of the other

• The service encounter breaks down

• Cultural stereotypes and animosity are reinforced

Page 20: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Norms and expectations

• Koreans – business encounter should not be personal; should focus on business and involve minimum of speaking

• African American – business encounter should be a social encounter that emphasizes a relationship between interactants

Page 21: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

According to the information Bailey gives, do Koreans and African Americans in LA belong to different speech communities?

Understanding how norms for communication differ across communities can help ease tensions/stereotypes

Page 22: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Register

“register” is a term that describes how language varies across situations

Ottenheimer: varieties of a language that are considered appropriate to specific situations [formal; informal; babytalk]

Agar examples: Scuba divers, junkies

Page 23: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Ways of Speaking

Registers can be described as “ways of speaking”

The way you speak to an older person

a baby

when you are joking

Page 24: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Register featuresRegisters exist WITHIN dialects.

However, registers usually involve variations in vocabulary, pitch, pacing, and sometimes phonology and intonation.

e.g. most formal registers in English have less pitch variation than informal ones, plus a distinct vocabulary, and pacing that may be slower or faster than casual ones

Page 25: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Film: American Tongues

As you watch, think about this quote from two leading sociolinguists:

“Although public discrimination on the grounds of race, religion and social class is not now acceptable, it appears that discrimination on linguistic grounds is publicly acceptable, even though linguistic differences may themselves be associated with ethnic, religious and class differences.”

quote from L. Milroy and J. Milroy’s Authority in Language

Page 26: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Discussion

• Examples of prestige, stigmatized and negative prestige dialects?

• Thinking about the definition of speech community, are “dialect” and worldview connected?

Page 27: Language and Dialect. Language vs. Dialect “A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” Usually “language” refers to the DOMINANT dialect, which.

Do we all speak one language?

One language One culture

• Obvious examples from American Tongues

• What cultural differences did people focus on when also describing regional or socio-economic differences in language?