Language Attitudes Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 components of language attitudes?

A

cognitive (beliefs and stereotypes)
affective (evaluations)
behavioural

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2
Q

What is an attitude?

A
a disposition to react un/favourably to a class of objects
a mental construct
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3
Q

How can attitudes be explored?

A

in/direct approaches

ex/implicit measures

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4
Q

Explain a Language Attitude experiment

A

Labov’s subjective reaction tests
they listened to ‘r’ less/full speech extracts and guessed their jobs (ranked by prestige)
rated ‘r’ less one or 2 ranks lower - stereotyped reaction evoked

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5
Q

Explain a matched guise technique

A

Giles’
same speaker, same passage, different accents
consistently, RP scores higher for intelligence and regional accent guises score higher for friendliness and honesty

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6
Q

What is perceptual dialectology?

A

perception of geog distribution of lang variation

-how we perceive our space can influence our behaviour

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7
Q

What are the pros and cons of perceptual dialectology?

A

pros: tells us more about language attitudes
cons: too testing of listener’s geog knowledge?

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8
Q

Explain the draw a map task

A

informants are asked to construct a hand drawn map of where they think dialect boundaries exist

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9
Q

Explain a perceptual dialectology experiment

A

Montgomery, investigate N/S divide in UK
participants asked to divide UK into linguistic N/S and then place speaker on maps on 6 given cities corresponding to where they think they’re from

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10
Q

Explain the results of a perceptual dialectology experiment

A

cultural salience: Manc/Geordie highly recognised
general awareness: reliant on sociocultural factors not ling
proximity: Crewe speakers shifted boundary to include them, ‘lower’ Northerner’s placed boundary further south to include

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11
Q

What is a problem with matched guised techniques?

A

authenticity of the accents

reading language = unnatural

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12
Q

What is a problem with perceptual dialectology techniques?

A

geographical knowledge needed

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13
Q

Explain the other-accents effect

A

Stevenage et al.

English/Scottish listeners had greater accuracy for own accent

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14
Q

Explain forced categorisation studies

A

listeners are given categories to assign speakers to, but this needs a reliance on geog knowledge

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15
Q

Explain Clopper and Pisoni’s forced categorisation study

A

only 30% accuracy when dividing speakers into 6 dialects
broader perceptual categories=more reliable
homebodies=always lived in Indiana
army brats = lived in 3+ US states
-ABs performed better

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16
Q

Explain Clopper and Pisoni’s free classification study?

A

removes lack of geog knowledge
average 10 groups created
-perception of finer distinctions
-mobile listener’s created more than non-mobile