Low-flown vocabulary in Modern English

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Low-flown vocabulary in modern literary and media discourse

Transcript of Low-flown vocabulary in Modern English

Page 1: Low-flown vocabulary in Modern English

Low-flown vocabulary in modern literary and

media discourse

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- literary colloquial- familiar colloquial - low colloquial

COLLOQUIAL WORDS

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a) change of their phonetic or morphological form; b) change of both their form and lexico-stylistic meaning; c) words which resulted from the change of their lexical and/or lexico-stylistic meaning.

3 subgroups

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The 1st Subgroup:a) clipping (shortening): caff – caffeteria; b) contamination of a word combination: kinna – kind of; c) contamination of grammatical forms: I'd go, there's.

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The 2nd Subgroupa) the change of the grammatical form which brings the change of the lexico-stylistic meaning: a handful – a person causing a lot of trouble

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b) The chqnge of word-building pattern

- affixation: oldie, tenner;

- compounding: backroom boy, clip-joint;

- conversion: to bag, teach-in;

- telescopy: flush, fruice;

- shortening and affixation: Archie;

-compounding and affixation:

strap-hanger.

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general slang special slang interjargon social,professional

SlangSlang

WOW!WOW!

OH!OH! TDTD AWOLAWOL

!! ??

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Examples of Internet Jargon

BTW - By the wayCYA - See you aroundFAQ - Frequently asked questionsLOL - Laugh out loudTTYL - Talk to you later

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Vulgarisms

are the words which are not generally used in public. However, they can be found in

modern literature nowadays

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Dialectal words are used to intensify the emotive and

expressive colouring of speech

‘ud – would, ‘im – him, ‘aseen – have seen,

canna – cannot, dinna – don’t

‘ud – would, ‘im – him, ‘aseen – have seen,

canna – cannot, dinna – don’t

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Conversational words of all kinds are widely used for stylistic purposes:

- everyday speech - newspaper language - poetry - fiction