Language Change Flashcards

1
Q

CJ Bailey

A
  • Wave Model
  • Change weakens across different regions, social groups and time periods
  • Strong and more frequent in original regional to weaken and less used in others
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2
Q

Chen

A
  • S curve model
  • A change begins gradually then speeds up and then slows down
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3
Q

Howard Giles

A
  • Accommodation theory
  • People change their language in order to accommodate their speaker
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4
Q

MJ Halliday: Functional theory

A
  • Changes in order to meet their social, psychological and cultural needs
  • Serves particular human needs
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5
Q

Jean Aitchison

A
  • Metaphors of prescriptivism
    1) Damp spoon syndrome: non standard is lazy - damp spoon in sugar bowl
    2) Crumbling castle: English was perfect but now is eroding
    3) Infectious disease: we ‘catch’ non standard from others around us and it spreads
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6
Q

Labov Matha’s Vineyard Study

A
  • Fisherman centralise their diphthong /au/ sound in order to establish as a group and isolate from tourists
  • Retains their social identity
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7
Q

Sharon Goodman

A
  • Informalisation: There is a trend towards more informal use of language in public contexts
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8
Q

Peter Trudgill

A
  • 1974 Norwich Study
  • Studied the pronunciation of the suffix ‘ing’
  • Focused more on language is about external factors; social class and our environments
  • Upper- middle and lower- working class more likely to use non standard
  • Men more likely to use non - standard
  • Women use non standard in humorous settings
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9
Q

Geoffrey Leech

A
  • Links to Goodman concept and addresses the increase in acceptability and use of features associated with informal private discourse in public and written discourse
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10
Q

Labov New York Study

A
  • Upper class has stronger vocalic /r/
  • Lower class exaggerated this for overt prestige
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11
Q

Aitchison’s PIDC model

A
  • How words are formed
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12
Q

Choy and Dodd

A
  • Teachers judge students by accents
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13
Q

Howard Giles: Matched Guise Test

A
  • Participants said RP sounded more powerful
  • Regional accents were more persuasive
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14
Q

Basil Bernstein

A
  • Working class language is ‘restricted’
  • Upper class language is ‘elaborate’
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15
Q

Jenny Cheshire

A
  • Studied language of teens in Reading
  • Found high level of non - standard in gangs e.g. multiple negation, -s inflection (I calls hers)
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