2025 Lang 3/4 Flashcards

(94 cards)

1
Q

Lambie

A

Elab: In May 2024 following the release of the federal budget, senator JL on ABC insiders interviewed. Outraged by the lack of clarity and detail provided by the labor govt.

Eg: “You can’t be fricken well, you’ve got to be jokin’ me”

Explain: Accent= evident in longer and wider diphthong in ‘me’. /oi/ & sub of final phoneme in verb ‘jokin’’ /n/ for /nj/ ++ despite being on nat. TV Lambie employs mild expletive “fricken” to aid expression of frustration towards the Lab. Govt.

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2
Q

S.Wog

A

Elaborate: Brothers Theodore and Nathan Saidden are Sydney-born Australians of Egyptian and Greek descent. Their Greek ethnolect is overtly evident in their youtube and Netflix series episodes where they parody their lives growing up in the western Sydney suburbs.
Example: In an episode titled “The iPhone” Theo enthusiastically describes his new phone to his brother “Itz god all da add ons az well”
Explain: Voiced voiceless consonants with /z/
Sub /d/ for /t/ and flapping /d/ not /ð/
The popularity of the show perhaps signals contemporary Aus awareness of NS varieties as a legitimate and important reflection of the nation’s multicultural ID
Quote: “ethnicity is an important part of social ID” (Burridge & Mulder)

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3
Q

Ethnolects

A

Elab: ‘Ethnolects play a vital role in the cultural identity of their speakers in displaying in-group ID.’
Quick: Ethnocultural varieties of AusE differ across the subsystems depending on the users first language. Often most evident in terms of phonology, ethnolects may add or elide phonemes, may voice voiceless phonemes or alter stress patterns in particular lexemes. For example an ethnic Italian Australian language user may add phonemes on consonant ending lexemes in noun phrases such as ‘thisa girla’; insert a schwa between syllables in lexemes such as ‘b/r/eak/ə/fast’ or voice voiceless consonants such as ‘lizen’ rather than ‘listen’. Although they may be minority dialects in AusE, ethnocultural varieties are a crucial marker of social identity and ethnic group membership.

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4
Q

J.Allan

A

Elaborate: Jacinta Allan is the premier of Victoria who in February 2024 gave a formal apology on behalf of the government to Victorians who experienced historical abuse and neglect as children in institutional care. This particular speech was given in the context of the legislative assembly.
Example: Allen employs the declarative “From 1928 to 1990, thousands of children were entrusted to the state, religious organisations and charitable agencies.”
Explain: Through the manipulation of information flow, front focus is placed on the adverbial phrase “from 1928 to 1990” to underscore the time frame within which the abuse and neglect occurred. This initial focus frames the following agentless passive “thousands of children were entrusted” which draws attention to the grammatical subject “thousands of children” while upholding negative face needs of the victims by respectfully not mentioning the perpetrators as the agent is ellipted.

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5
Q

Nominalizations

A

Elaborate: The VCAA exploit formal language choices to reflect their expertise as a leading education authority in communications to schools regarding the satisfactory completion of VCE.
Example: Nominalised nouns such as ‘assessment’, ‘submission’, ‘achievement’ and ‘calculation’ are chosen by the VCAA.
Explain: These choices create a more commanding style which appears more objective in nature as rules and expectations of examinations are outlined. Suiting the formality of the discourse these nominalization’s have a place and fulfill an important referential function through their clear inter comprehensibility.

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6
Q

Pedro

A

Elaborate: Pedro Wonaemirri, winner of the NATSIAA award for Indigenous art, is a Tiwi artist who featured in a recent episode of “AWAYE!” on radio national. In speaking with Rudi Bremer, many features common to Aboriginal Englishes are evident.
Example: “Winnin’ de award for dis year make me feel bery proud an’ ‘appy and strong”
Explain: sound change from /ng/ to /n/ is evident in “winning” and /d/ for /th/ in “this” and “the”
Another common characteristic is the elision of the initial /h/ phoneme in “happy”

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7
Q

AAE Quick E.g’s

A

pragmatic discourse tag ‘owot’ = avoid direct Q to ^ politeness
sub /n/ instead of /ng/
‘mum’ mother and/or aunts (broadening)

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8
Q

Broad Accent AND Dialect -Quick E.g’s

A

flapping the medial /t/, (/t/ sound in the middle of a word is often pronounced with a /d/ sound instead -‘little’ said as ‘liddle’ for example).
Colourful compounds ‘deadshit’, ‘shithead’ and ‘shitbox’

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9
Q

Powell & Clarko

A

Elab: May 2024, Wil Powell-AFL player for the GC suns- was handed a 5 match suspension
after employing the
E.g: homophobic noun slur “faggot” directed towards a Brisbane Lions player.
Eplain: While he utilised the slur as a normalised sledge not intending to carry the same hostility (eg fear mongering) as it conveyed… [quote]… Powell whose 2 brothers are gay recognised the impact his words had and since apologised profusely for his actions. it’s use still Quote: “validates all the fear they [members of LGBTQIA+ community] feel” (Ian Roberts, gay rights activist and ex rugby league player)

Extension: Instance came in the wake of a series of offensive language call outs in the AFL during March and April. Including esteemed coach Alistair C, use of compound noun “cocksucker”

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10
Q

mattxiv

A

Elab: Use of offensive lang by Tate supporters directed towards Instagram user @mattxiv followed their post ccalling out TikToks failure to censor Tate’s ‘inappropriate’ content. Supportes DM’d mattxiv on the app with insults…
E.g: homophobic slur “faggot” and crude imperatives including “kys faggot” and “burn in hell”
Explain: With clear intentions of in sighting fear, language is weaponised by the users with erroneous assumptions of superiority to vilify and shame mattxiv. Upon receiving this backlash, mattxiv reposted the comments in a subsequent post, highlighting the harm the language caused.

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11
Q

Banducci’s BS

A

Elab: April 2024, Greens senator Nick Mckim grew increasingly frustrated with Woolworths CEO Brad Banducci’s refusal to adequately answer questions during a senate inquiry into supermarket pricing. -> warned B he may be held in contempt by Senate and up in prison.
E.g: Outlining that he was “not interested in [his] spin or [his] bullshit”
Explain: McKim’s use of the dysphemistic compound ‘bullshit’ including the expletive ‘shit’ serves him in…[quote here]… despite the serious context of the senate.
Quote: “venting strong emotion” (Fromkin, et al)

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12
Q

Friend group swearing

A

Elab: In personal experiences within friend groups and with people whom a close tenor is shared with, swearing is not considered offensive and is more often than not looked upon positively.
E.g: Colourful compounds “dickhead” and “dumbfuck” utilised jovially in response to someone making a silly mistake eg forgetting what day it is.
Explain: In these scenarios, the offensive lang is more or less disarmed and the mutual understanding of its attenuated meaning builds rapport between my friends and myself.

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13
Q

Rio Tinto #1

A

Elab: multinational mining company with a strong presence in Australia mixes language sensical to the masses with dense and elaborate noun phrases in communications to shareholders.
E.g: “to stress test our portfolio and investment decisions under alternative macroeconomic settings and commodity outlooks.”
Explain: By mixing the common-sense verb phrase “stress test” with the complexity of the noun phrase “alternative macroeconomic settings” RT encourages a perception of understanding for readers while obscuring salient information. As a large company, RioTinto leverages the language to reassure shareholders about future stability through deliberate ambiguity.
Quote: ‘an instrument of concealment rather than revelation’ (Harold Pinter)

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14
Q

Rio Tinto #2 (FLS)

A

Elab: Included as small print at the end of the document, a deft display of doublespeak and deception is present in details surrounding ‘forward looking statements’ which comprises of verbs such as ‘plan’, ‘should’ and ‘will’.
E.g: ‘plan’, ‘should’ and ‘will’
Explain: RT explains with great ambiguity that due to the ‘unknown risks and uncertainties’ they cannot be held to commitments made using FLS.
Quote: RioTinto adroitly covers themselves, nullifying assurances around decarbonisation, as their ‘words become divorced from reality, responsibility and people’s real thoughts’ (Jung Chang)

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15
Q

Teenspeak/slang quick e.g’s

A

noun ‘rizz’ ‘rizzler’
verb ‘cooked’
noun ‘aura’

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16
Q

Euphemism quick e.g’s

A

‘correctional facility’ (prison)
‘pregnancy termination’ (abortion)
‘between jobs’ (unemployed)

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17
Q

Inclusive quick e.g’s

A

Use of ‘person’ not ‘man’ e.g ‘businessperson’ and steering away from gratuitous labelling patterns such as ‘female surgeon’ to be cogniscient of previously subjugated groups (women)
–> The language is a barometer of societal change and expectations.

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18
Q

Jargon quick e.g’s

A

CommSec, aus largest online stockbroking firm, employs lexis with meanings specific to trading on their platform: ‘exchange traded funds’ /’ETFs’
‘ask’
‘dividend’….[Stephen Fry]
Fulfills communication needs for the initiated by efficiently and economically capturing distinctions not made in ordinary lang

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19
Q

Sentinel events

A

In May 2024 following an equipment failure during heart surgery at the Austin Hospital in Heidelberg, Melbourne, Austin health utilised euphemisms in subsequent interviews. The incident- which left the patient seriously harmed- was declared a ‘sentinel event’. The term, defined by Safer care VIC as ‘when something goes wrong with a patient’s care resulting in serious preventable harm or death’, allows medical and healthcare professionals to discuss confronting and often disturbing scenarios without insighting fear in audiences. it also provides a term which can be used in the media witout disclosing confidential treatment information.->Burridge ‘avoiding’ quote

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20
Q

PWDA

A

An authority on integration of people with disabilities into the community, encourages consideration of both ‘person first’ and ‘ID first’ language. Leaning more towards the person first alternative which is supported by recent research in ‘trends in neuroscience’ PWDA focuses on emphasising the humanity of the person. The paper also discourages throwaway adj “maniacal”, “mad” -> should use more formal NP. and euphemisms = “at best condescending, at worst offensive”

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21
Q

Roald Dahl

A

In February 2023, Dennis Glover published an article in The Age exploring the censorship of specific phrases in Roald Dahl books, and their substitution for more inclusive alternatives. The adjective “fat” was substituted for “enormous”, the noun phrases “small men” for “small people” and “cloud-men” for “cloud people”. By avoiding(/nullifying?) references to specific body shapes and genders, the revised editions offer a more socially sensitive retelling of the classic children’s literature. While Glover deems the censorship as “the plot twist even Orwell didn’t think of” and questions their integrity, these changes reflect ever-evolving contemporary views of inclusion and avoiding the perpetuation of potentially harmful stereotypes. Additionally, this upholds current societal beliefs that all identities should be respected, recognised and validated in the ideal egalitarian society we aim to create.

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22
Q

Jeff Kennett

A

Earlier this month, at the Young Liberal Annual Gala, held at the Melbourne Arts Centre. Jeff Kennett, former Victorian premier, drew controversy following his use of the expletive noun ‘bitch’ when delivering a speech. Kennett employed the swear word as part of a larger derogatory noun phrase when he labelled a female guest a ‘rude little bitch’ after assuming she was talking throughout his speech. In this instance Kennett seeks to render “greater social distance” (Crystal) as he condemns the suspected poor behaviour of the guest. As a result of the misogynistic undertones of the expletive ‘bitch’, many took offence to Kennett’s response and called for him to be kicked out of the gala, highlighting the divisive effects of this language.

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23
Q

Liam Payne

A

7News article published following the death of singer Liam Payne who fell off a 13-14m balcony reported that he sustained ‘severe injuries incompatible with life’

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24
Q
A
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25
Question
Answer
26
Lambie
The use of BAA, colloquialisms SAE and diminutive endings can 'increase your likeability' (Dr Evan Kidd)
27
Allan
'more formal choices reflect serious subjects... elevate the style of discourse and lend dignity, weight and authority to a communication' (Pam Peters)
28
SAE (generic) x3
'Best practice' (Burridge) 'A benchmark' (Crystal) 'A benchmark of excellence that reflects correctness, precision, purity and elegance' (Burridge)
29
non-st (generic) x2
'All dialects are equally good for the purposes they serve' (Burridge and Mulder) 'The value of a low prestige variety for solidarity and identification with a group can often outweigh considerations of prestige' (Ryan)
30
AAE (generic)
AAE 'stands with others as a legitimate communication system for its speakers' (Hawkins)
31
S.Wog
'Ethnicity is an important part of social ID and something that ppl want to demonstrate through their use of language' (Burridge and Mulder)
32
Ethno (generic)
'Use it to differentiate themselves from both their parents' values and those of the Anglo host culture" (Collins) 'Members of a social group draw personal strength and pride from using the same language' (Kramsch)
33
Rio Tinto/Doublespeak
‘words become divorced from reality, responsibility and people’s real thoughts’ (Jung Chang, writer) ‘an instrument of concealment rather than revelation’ (Harold Pinter) “used to disguise, not illuminate” (Gore Vidal)
34
Discriminatory lang
“validates all the fear they [members of LGBTQIA+ community] feel” (Ian Roberts, gay rights activist and ex rugby league player)
35
Dyphem/Offensive Lang
“venting strong emotion” (Fromkin, et al)
36
Inclusive language
"Dismantle bias" (words at work) "A healthy expansion of moral concern" (Noam Chomsky)
37
Euphemism
"avoiding those things which threaten to cause offence and distress" (Burridge) "Linguistic deoderisers" (Burride)
38
Jargon
"It is not exclusivity; it is precision" (Stephen Fry) "Unless you are a member of a clique... it's gibberish" (Steven Pinker)
39
Teenspeak
"a code, a way of excluding others" (McCrindle)
40
Varieties Intro quote
"The Australian lexicon embodies the attitudes, values and self perception of Australians" (Collins)
41
Broad
"Manifested in an understated and irreverent humour" (Collins)
42
Swearing/dysphemism
"The more affectionate they feel towards someone, the more abusive the language can be towards that person" (Allan and Burridge)
43
Ugle-Hagan being called a c**n
abuse was condemned as "harmful and abhorrent" (Western Bulldogs FC)
44
45
Question
Answer
46
Syn. for 'although'
while whilst granted that even supposing despite the possibility that albeit (however)
47
Syn. for 'despite'
in spite of notwithstanding regardless of in defiance of without being affected by in the face of for all even with undeterred by
48
Synonyms for Unify
Connect, forge, consolidate, align, affiliate, bring together, reveal alliances and allegiances
49
Synonyms for Empower
Authorise, enable, sanction, galvanise, encourage, embolden
50
Synonyms for Discriminate
Segregate, vilify, denigrate, alienate, mistreat, persecute, abuse, oppress, subjugate, victimise
51
Analogous
comparable in certain respects, typically in a way which makes clearer the nature of the things compared.
52
Syn. for Judgement
Perspicacity
53
54
Question
Answer
55
Syntactic Patterning
PAL Parallelism Antithesis Listing
56
Information Flow
FEC Front focus End focus Clefting ---> throw focus to what the user wants to highlight
57
Front focus (FIPv)
Fronting Inversion Passive voice
58
End Focus
Existential (There/It dummy subject) sentences
59
Clefting
It clefts/What clefts = throw focus as get own clause/ appear more authoritative and indisputable
60
Cohesion features
Lex choice eg synonymy Hypernymy Collocation Info Flow Ana/Cataphoric reference Deictics Repetition/Substitution/Ellipsis Conjunctions and Adverbials
61
What does cohesion do?
"Glue" Provide links w in text, tie together, provide a reference, connects, creates stronger ties
62
what does coherence do?
Understanding for the audience: assists in navigation of the text, consistency across text, consistency of sem. field, directs the reader at a DISCOURSE level, signposts different sections/focuses within the text.
63
Deixis
Helps the audience to link the text to its time and place setting eg 'temporal context'
64
Coherence features
(FLICCc) Formatting, Logical ordering, Cohesion, Consistency and conventions
65
Ana vs Cata pronoun reference
Ana = refers to the previous full NP Cata = refers to the proceeding full NP
66
What are the Strategies of spoken discourse
TTMC: Topic management Turn taking (floor etc.) Management of repair sequences Code-switching
67
What are the features of spoken discourse
IDOONA: Interrogative tags Discourse markers/particles Openings and closings Overlapping speech NF features e.g. pauses, voiced hes, etc. Adjacency pairs
68
Face words for negative face
Have free will, not be imposed upon, not bossed around, respected
69
Face words for positive face
Well regarded, admired, affirmed, liked, valued
70
Discourse marker vs discourse particle
Marker = a sign/signal Particle = just 'there' eg "like"
71
List the types of adjacency pairs
Q/A Offer/Refusal Statement & Acknowledgement e.g. "miss?" "hmm?"
72
Parataxis/Paratactic style
Placing of clauses or phrases one after another, without words to indicate coordination or subordination e.g. "Tell me, how are you?" (Used for exchanging the floor)
73
74
75
76
77
Question
Answer
78
Passing floor
cede the floor
79
Features together
work in concert
80
Semantic field
belong to the domain of...
81
Roles of a host
ask questions elicit responses maintain and engaged relationship (all in a professional manner)
82
Face needs
Appealing to face needs
83
Euphemism
Mitigate a loaded topic
84
85
Question
Answer
86
What is a better word for letter
Grapheme
87
What is a better word for spelling
Orthography
88
Define elucidate
To make clear/explain
89
Define poignant
evoking a keen sense of sadness or regret.
90
91
Question
Answer
92
F/InF Intro
In Australia, Standard Australian English (SAE), the dominant variety, is seen by many as a “linguistic best practice” (Burridge). Serving a multitude of social and functional purposes, SAE carries overt prestige and is widely considered important. However, in many contexts SAE is transcended by non-Standard varieties, including ethnolects and the Broad Australian accent and dialect for their covert prestige and abilities to convey authenticity and signal solidarity. Though SAE is inextricably associated with the core communicative needs of language, non-Standard varieties serve important identity functions in the dynamic linguistic landscape of contemporary Australia.
93
Attitudes intro
Far from a monolithic entity, Australian English is a cluster of mutually intelligible speech varieties. Whilst these varieties possess their own unique features, each evokes both positive and negative perceptions from different groups. Widely believed to be “intrinsically superior” (Burridge), Standard Australian English (SAE) is necessary for universal comprehension particularly in the public domain. However, non-Standard varieties, such as the Broad Australian accent and dialect along with ethnocultural varieties are often associated with inferiority despite them being equally valid linguistic alternatives. Australian English is a convenient term to describe the dynamic linguistic landscape of contemporary Australia; the diversity and variability of AusE necessarily attracts a range of attitudes, judgements and perceptions.
94
Include/Exclude
As a potent tool for the expression of group and individual identities, language empowers users to strengthen bonds and relationships while retaining the ability to endorse injustices and oppression. Through jargon, members of a group are able to reflect their identity and allegiance despite the inherent tendency of jargon to bewilder outsiders. Similarly, drawing upon dysphemistic choices in appropriate settings can consolidate relationships through generating shared humour and mateship. In some contexts, however, these choices can quickly become discriminatory and weaponised, consciously or sub-consciously, to suppress the ability of others to embrace or express their own identities. While language choices can foster unity and solidarity, language users must be wary of their capacity to alienate and diminish.