dialect Flashcards
manchester dialect
chewing gum - chuddy
owt - anything
scran - food
Paul Kerswill’s Dialect Levelling
- observed that regional varieties of english are dying out (called this dialect levelling)
- local variations of speech are becoming more like standard english
- this is due to increased social mobility which means tight-knit groups are breaking down, meaning there is less pressure to speak in a regional form
- norm-enforcements are disappearing due to closed social networks
the surrey dialect
- on the london commuter belt
- lexis: bannick (to beat or thrash) timmersome (timid)
- grammar: non standard copular ‘be’,
non-standard past tense of strong verbs ‘knowd’
social network theory
- observed the effect that the size and diversity of your social group has on your language
- an individuals’ social network falls somewhere between ‘open’ and ‘closed’
- a closed, multiplex social network acts as a strong norm enforcer
forest of dean
- sparsely populated and rural area
- ‘ship’ (sheep) meaning someone who wanders aimlessly around the village
Milroy and Milroy
- argues that britain is an increasingly socially mobile society with people moving more both geographically and in terms of status
Reading Boys
She created social networks for each member of the group and gave them a network strength scores, determining whether they were a primary member, secondary member or non-member of the group
She discovered there was a positive correlation between between social network and 6/11 features
She then created the vernacular culture index which determined status, including things such as style of dress and carrying knives
She discovered that some features were very closely linked to status
Gile’s Matched Guise
- an attempt to identify attitudes and prejudices about accents
- Giles performed an experiment with an actor using both RP and a Birmingham accent
- the RP speaker was consistently judged to be more intelligent
Dixon, Mahoney and Cox Matched Guise
- fake police interview setup
- everyone (including people from Birmingham) thought that the Birmingham speaker was most likely to be guilty