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Today What is sociolinguistics? Language variation Dialects Readings: 10.1-10.2, 10.4
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Page 1: Lect19 socio1

Today What is sociolinguistics? Language variation Dialects

Readings: 10.1-10.2, 10.4

Page 2: Lect19 socio1

Sociolinguistics The study of the relationship between

language and society, of languagevariation, and of attitudes aboutlanguage

Variation may occur at all levels of thegrammar

Page 3: Lect19 socio1

Language variation No two speakers of a language speak

exactly the same way Between group variation = intergroup

variation No individual speaker speaks the same

way all the time Within-speaker variation = intraspeaker

variation

Page 4: Lect19 socio1

Dialect A variety of a language spoken by a group

of people that is characterized bysystematic features (e.g., phonological,lexical, grammatical) that distinguish itfrom other varieties of that same language

Idiolect: the speech variety of an individualspeaker

Page 5: Lect19 socio1

Language

… dialect dialect dialect …

… idiolect idiolect idiolect …

Language =a continuumof dialects

Dialect =a continuumof idiolects

Page 6: Lect19 socio1

Misconceptions about ‘dialect’ Dialect ≠ ‘substandard’ Dialect ≠ ‘incorrect’ Dialect ≠ ‘slang’

FACT: Everyone speaks a dialect

Page 7: Lect19 socio1

Language vs. dialect? Linguistic criterion

Mutual intelligibility YES? = dialects NO? = languages

e.g., British vs. American vs. Irish vs. Australian (= dialects of English)

Page 8: Lect19 socio1

L1

L2

L1 (D4)/L2(Div)

http://italian.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ&sdn=italian&zu=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.italica.rai.it%2Fprincipali%2Flingua%2Fbruni%2Fmappe%2Fmappe%2Ff_dialetti.htm

Page 9: Lect19 socio1

Language or Dialect?

Q: Why do dialects exist?A: Because of isolation or long term separation of groups

Isolation can be across time, geography or social barriers. Two types of“dialects”:(1) sociolects or “social dialects”: linguistic differentiation based upon onmembership in a longstanding socially-isolated or separate group

(2) regional dialects: linguistic differentiation based upon on membership in alongstanding geographically-isolated or separate group

Page 10: Lect19 socio1

Problems (cont’d) Asymmetries in intelligibility, e.g.,

Danish speakers understand Swedish, butnot vice versa

Brazilian Portuguese speakers understandSpanish, but not vice versa

Page 11: Lect19 socio1

Problems (cont’d) Nonlinguistic criteria (political, historical,

geographic etc.) may play a role Mandarin, Cantonese are mutually

unintelligible, but are referred to as ‘dialects’of Chinese

Serbian and Croatian are mutually intelligible,but are referred to as separate languages Czech vs. Slovak Norwegian vs. Swedish

Page 12: Lect19 socio1

Ways dialects vary Phonological (‘accent’) Morphological Syntactic/grammatical Semantic/lexical

Page 13: Lect19 socio1

Regional dialects Dialects that are defined in terms of

geographic boundaries

Page 14: Lect19 socio1

Where are they from?

Karen Lisa Margaret Michele

Nancy Peggy Susie

u U I

´ A i

o

Page 15: Lect19 socio1

Map of US Dialects

SusieMargaret

Karen

Lisa Michele

Nancy

Peggy

Page 16: Lect19 socio1

Regional U.S. dialects Northern Midland Southern Western

isogloss: a linguistic feature marking out the areal limits of a dialectarea; or the boundary itself. (several form an “isogloss bundle”)

http://accent.gmu.edu/browse_maps/namerica.phphttp://www.ku.edu/~idea/northamerica/usa/usa.htm

Some sociolects:-Yiddish-Pennsylvania Dutch-Chicano English-Vietnamese English