Language variation register genre dialect accent.

67
Language variation • register • genre • dialect • accent

Transcript of Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Page 1: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Language variation

• register

• genre

• dialect

• accent

Page 2: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Language variation

• dialect

• accent• "a language"

Page 3: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Discussing language variation in Iceland

• Are there any dialects in Icelandic?

• What "type" of Icelandic is taught to foreign students?

• Will they hear any difference in the Icelandic spoken in Reykjavík, Ísafjörður, Akureyri, Neskaupstaður, Höfn .....

• Can all Icelanders understand each other?

Page 4: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Discussing language variation in Iceland

• Compare this to an Icelandic student who has learnt English for 15 years at school and at university in Iceland –

• will s/he be able to communicate with people on the street in London, Taunton, Cardiff, Manchester, Newcastle, Glasgow, Aberdeen, Londonderry, Dublin ....?

Page 5: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Discussing language variation in Iceland

• Can all speakers of Icelandic understand each other?

• Can all speakers of English understand each other?

• German? Italian? Japanese?

Page 6: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Discussing language variation in Iceland

• How long do you have to listen to an Icelander to hear what part of Iceland s/he comes from?

• Britain?

• Germany?

• Norway?

• Italy?

Page 7: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

I saw her yesterday

I seed her yesterday

So I said to him ...

So I says to him ...

I don’t want any more trouble

I don’t want no more trouble

English?

Page 8: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

DescriptionPrescription

descriptive rules or prescriptive rules?

Page 9: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• Our father which art in heaven

• Our father who art in heaven

• Our father who is in heaven

• Our father oo is in heaven

• Our father what is in heaven

• Our father as be in heaven

English?

Page 10: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• Good and bad English

• Correct and incorrect English

• Standard and substandard English

• Standard and non-standard English

• Dialects of English

English?

Page 11: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• Lexical - vocabulary

• Grammatical

• Phonological- pronunciation

LINGUISTIC VARIABLES

Page 12: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• Lexical - vocabulary

Page 13: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

This and the following maps are from Widdowson

and Upton

Isoglossshowing lexicalvariables

Page 14: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing lexicalvariables

Page 15: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing lexicalvariables

Page 16: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing lexicalvariables

Page 17: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing lexicalvariables

Page 18: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing lexicalvariables

Page 19: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• Grammatical• Lexical - vocabulary

Page 20: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing grammaticalvariables

Page 21: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing grammaticalvariables

Page 22: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing grammaticalvariables

Page 23: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing grammaticalvariables

Page 24: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Isoglossesshowing grammaticalvariables

Page 25: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• Phonological- pronunciation

• Grammatical• Lexical - vocabulary

Page 26: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• vocabulary• grammar• pronunciation

}→ dialect

→ accent

dialect 1 → accent 1dialect 2 → accent 2dialect 3 → accent 3dialect 4 → accent 4

Each dialect has its own accent:

Standard dialect → standard acccent + all other accents

Page 27: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

• vocabulary• grammar• pronunciation

}→ dialect

→ accent

London dialect → London acentYorkshire dialect → Yorkshire accentSomerset dialect → Somerset accentStandard English → RP

+ London, Yorshire, Somerset .....

English dialects:

Page 28: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Phonological variables

Page 29: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

STRUT/FOOT

BATH/TRAP

Page 30: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

ISOGLOSS

A line drawn on a map between two different realisations of a single linguistic variable.

Page 31: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

ISOGLOSS

These realizations are often the result of a historical process, such that on one side of the line the process has occurred (+), and on the other it has not occurred (-).

+_

Page 32: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

ISOGLOSS

b

ba

aHere are two isoglosses, showing two imaginary processes which we shall call a and b

Page 33: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

ISOGLOSS

b

ba

a

+a +b

+a -b

-a -b

-a +b

They split the area into 4 different language varieties.

Page 34: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

ISOGLOSS

Page 35: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

ISOGLOSS

Page 36: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

BUNDLES OF ISOGLOSSES

Isoglosses often occur in bundles, resulting in different dialectal areas with a transition zone between them.

dialect x

dialect y

Page 37: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 38: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 39: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 40: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Language

dialects

?What do we mean by:

language? dialect?

•Some possible definitions: Languages are divided into dialects Dialects are regional varieties of language Dialects are regional and social varieties of language

But first we have to ask: what do we mean by a language?

Page 41: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 42: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

EidskogEda

20 km

eistein

esten

Page 43: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 44: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Eid Eda

stein sten

Page 45: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

OsloStock-holm← dialect continuum →

Page 46: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

OsloStock-holm

EdaEid

Page 47: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

OsloStock-holm

Norwegian Swedish

socio-political entities

EdaEid

Page 48: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 49: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 50: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 51: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Dialect continua in Europe

Page 52: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Langauge B

"Language" A"Language" B

Garobia Porkistan

Gorb

Porki

A national border in adialect continuum

Page 53: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Language ALanguage Bbilingual area

BanandiaGorskch

Nanamai

Pthsiskt

A national border between twodifferent language families

Page 54: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Dialect continua in Europe

Page 55: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

What is a dialect?What a language?

Popular understanding:

1. A dialect is a type of language spoken by uneducated or country people. It is a corrupt form of the “correct” language. It is derived from the “corrrect” form.

Those who speak the language “correctly” do not speak “dialect”.

Page 56: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

What is a dialect?What a language?

Or:

2. A language is a collection of dialects, one of which has been adopted as the standard variety, which people think of as “the language”.

The standard variety is simply another dialect.

Page 57: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

A dialect becomes a standard:1. Selection. The dialect of the ruling or most

influential class is adopted as the standard.

2. Literacy. It acquires a written form.

3. Standardizaton. Grammars and dictionaries are composed, spelling becomes fixed, and are competing grammatical or spelling forms current, one is adopted as correct and the other(s) are deemed incorrect.

4. Elaboration. Its vocabulary increases with cultural, philosophical, technological and scientific development.

Page 58: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

the standard language:“French”, “German”

REGIONAL DIALECTS

Socialaxis

Geographical axis

Page 59: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Norsk Svenska

Eidskog Eda

Page 60: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 61: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

To Sweden, 1658

Page 62: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 63: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 64: Language variation register genre dialect accent.
Page 65: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Max Weinreich 1945 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_language_is_a_dialect_with_an_army_and_navy

"Vos iz der khilek fun a dialekt biz a shprakh?" Ikh hob gemeynt, az es ruft zikh im der maskilisher bitl, un ikh hob im gepruvt aroyffirn afn rikhtikn veg, nor er hot mikh ibergerisn "Dos veys ikh, ober ikh vel aykh gebn a besere definitsye. A shprakh iz a dialekt mit an armey un flot."

Page 66: Language variation register genre dialect accent.

Max Weinreich 1945 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_language_is_a_dialect_with_an_army_and_navy

...A teacher at a Bronx high school once appeared among the auditors. He had come to America as a child and the entire time had never heard that Yiddish had a history and could also serve for higher matters.... Once after a lecture he approached me and asked, 'What is the difference between a dialect and language?' I thought that the maskilic contempt had affected him, and tried to lead him to the right path, but he interrupted me: 'I know that, but I will give you a better definition. A language is a dialect with an army and navy.' From that very time I made sure to remember that I must convey this wonderful formulation of the social plight of Yiddish to a large audience

Page 67: Language variation register genre dialect accent.