Module 10 - Dialects Flashcards

1
Q

Accent

A

Phonological level sound changes

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2
Q

Dialect

A

Variations in speech and language patterns across groups of people, or “speech communities”, who share a set of norms and rules for the use of language, language characteristics, and communication habits

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3
Q

Dialect

A
  • Learned from parents/primary caregivers, peers, and community
  • non mainstream dialects sometimes have social stigma attached to them
  • rule governed, with dialect rules applying to:

phonology (speech sounds)

  • this course concentrates on phonological differences

Semantic (meaning)

Grammatical (rules of grammar)

Syntactic (sentence structure)

Pragmatic rules (rules of language use with other people) e.g. eye contact

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4
Q

dialectology

A

The branch of linguistics concerned with the geographic and social distributions of language

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5
Q

Regional dialects

A

varieties of English as defined by the geographic location in which the variety is spoken

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6
Q

Social Dialects

A

the varieties of English spoken by definable social groups

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7
Q

Speech Communities

A

Macroculture: larger community

e.g. in America the speech community is English speaking people

Microculture: smaller community

  • fewer members of this community
  • geographic region, ethnicity, social class, etc.
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8
Q

Regional Dialects

A

Main regional dialects in US

  • NE
  • South
    -Midwest

Each has subdivisions with variations

Differences come from a number of diff sources:

  • historical settlement patterns
  • migratory routes
  • contact with other language groups
  • physical and social separation
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9
Q

What do sociolinguists do?

A
  • Study the effects of language on people
  • Study the relationships b/w verbal + nonverbal linguistic forms and social communication
  • how a speaker talks + effect it has upon the speaker-listener (Adler, 1993)
  • The varieties of a language spoken by defined social groups
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10
Q

Social dialect and false stereotypes

A
  • The farther a dialect is from the mainstream dialect (more prestigious dialect), the more likely it is to carry social stigmatization
  • Even speakers of non mainstream dialects hold their own dialects in low esteem

false stereotypes:

nonmainstream dialects (NMD) are an incomplete attempt to master the mainstream variety

NMDs are unpatterned and unsystematic

NMD speakers learn at a slower rate than mainstream speakers

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11
Q

ASHA Posiiton Paper on Dialects

Competencies an SLP must have to distinguish between a difference and a disorder:

A
  • knowledge of a given dialect as a rule governed linguistic system
  • knowledge of the phonological and grammatical features of the dialect
  • knowledge of non-discriminatory testing procedures
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12
Q

English as Second language (ESL) or

English Language Learners (ELL)

A

Rules of L1 compete with the production of English

What is affected?

  • Phoneme differences
    -suprasegmental differences (stress, intonation)
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13
Q

Elective Services of an SLP

A

May provide elective clinical services to NMD speakers who DO NOT present a disorder

Provision of elective services requires SENSITIVITY and COMPETENCY in these areas:

  • linguistic features of the dialect
  • linguistic contrastive analysis procedures
  • understanding of the community and culture of the speaker
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14
Q

Linguistic Contrast Analysis

A
  • Obtain a representative speech sample
  • Narrowly transcribe words or phrases that highlight the dialectical variations
  • Analyze the sample by comparing it to the standard dialect and find the differences
  • Look at the variant features and identify rules that the speaker follows that account for the dialect
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15
Q

SLP as a Dialect Consultant

A

The SLP may serve in a consultative role to assist
educators in understanding the features of the
NMD to facilitate the learning of reading and
writing in mainstream English.

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16
Q

General American English

A

Neutralized unstressed vowels used often
š Use of unreleased final stops
š Well-articulated “hard” /r/
š Frequent and “hard” use of /ae/

17
Q

Southern American English

A

Regional dialect
š Monophthongization – diphthong produced as a monophthong
š Post-vocalic /r/ is very soft or changed to /ə/
š /s/ becomes /z/ in some words
š Variations in stress patterns
š /aʊ/ goes to /ɛʊ/ when followed by a voiceless consonant such as in OUT
š /j/ + vowel addition to form a “drawl” such as [sɪjət] for SIT
š Released and well-articulated /t/ in some words
š /ɛ/preceding a nasal
š In Standard American English, PEN is pronounced with /ɛ/
š In Southern American English, /ɛ/ is replaced with an /ɪ/

18
Q
A
19
Q

Northeastern Dialect

A

Examples of features: 1st 3 - distinctly New England (Bostonian)

  • /ɑ/ for /ɔ/ in words like CAUGHT resulting in CAUGHT sounding like COT
  • /ɑ/ - /ɔ/ merger - Don + Dawn become homophones
  • /ɑ/ for /æ/ in words spelled with /ɑ/ followed by a voiceless fricative such as in HALF + ASK or when /ɑ/ is followed by a nasal plus a consonant such as in DEMAND + EXAMPLE

derhotacized /r ɚ ɝ/

Intrusive /r/ and /ɚ/ replaces the schwa in nouns ending in schwa such as in IDEA, CHINA