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Varieties, Dialects, Accents Based in part on Childs, Wolfram & Schilling-Estes, Smith, and Rickford.

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Presentation on theme: "Varieties, Dialects, Accents Based in part on Childs, Wolfram & Schilling-Estes, Smith, and Rickford."— Presentation transcript:

1 Varieties, Dialects, Accents Based in part on Childs, Wolfram & Schilling-Estes, Smith, and Rickford

2 Accents  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-en- iDeZEE

3  Who in this room speaks a dialect? Dialects  Dialects of American English as YOU see them Dialects of American English

4 Some Popular Senses of “Dialect”  ‘I know we speak a dialect in the mountains, but it’s a very colorful way of speaking.’  ‘Dialect’ here refers to those varieties of English whose features have become widely recognized through American society, e.g.,  Southern drawl  New York accent  Etc.

5  For a variety of historical and social reasons, some dialects have become much more marked than others in American society, and speakers of those varieties therefore accept the dialect label more comfortably.

6 Linguists maintain that:  ‘ Dialect’ is a neutral label to refer to any variety of a language that is shared by a group of speakers.  To speak a language is to speak some dialect of that language

7 Facts about dialects  All languages consist of dialects (a language is a group of dialects; to speak a language is to speak a dialect of that language)  Therefore, everyone speaks at least one dialect  Dialect differences are usually minor and dialects of a language are usually mutually intelligible  Dialects are geographically, socially, politically determined

8 Facts about dialects  Some linguists distinguish between ‘dialect’ and ‘accent’:  Different dialects have differences of grammar and vocabulary;  Different accents have differences of pronunciation;  Every user of English uses one dialect or another, and one accent or another.

9 Facts about dialects  The status of any given dialect is arbitrarily determined (‘A language is a dialect with a navy and army’)  E.g., Swedish vs. Norwegian  But dialects can sometimes be mutually unintelligible  E.g., Mandarin vs. Cantonese  The terms ‘dialect’ & ‘language’ are politically and socially loaded.

10 UK Accents  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FyyT2 jmVPAk

11 American Dialects American dialectsAmerican dialects: How Linguists see them  What are the major US dialects that linguists identify? American dialectsAmerican dialects: How people around the country see them  Which dialects do many Americans consider “bad English”?  What do the majority of Americans see as the norm? America DialectsAmerica Dialects: How Hollywood sees them.

12 A Working Definition of Standard English  A particular dialect of English, being the only non- localized dialect, of global currency without significant variation, universally accepted as the appropriate educational target in teaching English; which may be spoken with an unrestricted choice of accent.

13 Global Currency for Standard English  Those who use Standard English – whether as their mother tongue or as a foreign or second language  Are not confined to any single locality or geographical area;  May be found in any inhabited region of the world.

14 The English Languages? McArthur  Will English as an international language succumb to the same fate as Latin?  Vulgar Latin evolved into the Romance languages  Classical Latin was used for administration and literature and survived in writing.  Standard English is more like Classical Latin than Vulgar Latin.

15 Labeling Vernacular Dialects  Strong affective associations related to particular labels  Negro Dialect, Substandard Negro English, Nonstandard Negro English, Black English Afro- American English, Ebonics, Vernacular Black English, African American (Vernacular) English, African American Language  Latino/a English, Chicano/a English, Hispanic English, Cholo  California talk, valley girl, surfer  Which do you prefer? Why? Are they the same?  What do you call the vernacular you speak?


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