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Lecture 12a:. Language, Thought & Culture – Dialects. Who in this room speaks a dialect? Dialects Dialects of American English. Language in Society. Dialects Dialects of English Standard American English African American English (AAE) Latino (Hispanic) English
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Lecture 12a: Language, Thought & Culture – Dialects
Who in this room speaks a dialect? Dialects Dialects of American English
Language in Society • Dialects • Dialects of English • Standard American English • African American English (AAE) • Latino (Hispanic) English • Non-native Varieties of English • Styles, Slang & Jargon
Dialects • Are there any dialects that you (or people you know) think sound ugly, stupid, or rude? • Who speaks a dialect? • We all do! • What is a language? • A dialect with an army and a navy!
Dialects • What do we listen to when we listen to people talk? • HOW people talk as much or more than to • WHATpeople say • After listening, we usually make judgments about people by the kind of language they use • Their regional background • Their social status • Their ethnicity • Their education • etc/.
So there are some who believe that language differences serve as the single most reliable indicator of social position in our society: • When we live a certain way, we are expected to match that lifestyle with our talk; • When we don’t meet people’s expectations to match that lifestyle with our talk (e.g., a teacher talking like a punk), the mismatch between words and behavior is itself a topic for conversation.
Language differences are unavoidable in a society composed of a variety of social groups.
The Many Meanings of ‘Dialect” • 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
In this definition, there is no inherently ‘good’ or ‘bad’ dialects • ‘Dialect’ is simply how we refer to any language variety that typifies a group of speakers within a language. • Socially favored or ‘standard’ varieties constitute dialects every bit as much as those varieties spoken by socially disfavored groups whose language differences are socially stigmatized.
Some Popular Senses of “Dialect” • ‘We went to Boston for a vacation and the people there sure do speak a dialect.’ • ‘Dialect’ here refers simple to those who speak differently from oneself.
Some Popular Senses of “Dialect” • ‘I know we speak a dialect I the mountains, but it’s a very colorful was 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.
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.
Some Popular Senses of “Dialect” • ‘The kids in that neighborhood don’t really speak English; they speak a dialect.’ • ‘Dialect’ here is perceived as an imperfect attempt to speak ‘correct’ or ‘proper’ English
Examples • Three mile vs. Three miles • Her ears be itching vs. Her ears itch • She done grew vs. She’s grown up • The result is incorrectly perceived as ‘deviant’ or ‘deficient’ from English.
Dialectologists’ Position • Dialects are not deviant forms of language, but simply different systems with distinct subsets of language patterns. • All language varieties are systematic • For any language feature, there are contexts in which the form may be used and contexts in which it is not typically used.
Appalachian Dialect Patterns 1a. Building is hard work. b. She was building a house. 2a. He likes hunting. b. He went hunting. 3a. The child was charming the adults. b. The child was very charming. 4a. He kept shocking the children. b. The story was shocking. 5a. They thought fishing was easy. b. They were fishing this morning.
Further Patterns for Appalachian a- 1a. They make money by building houses. b. They make money building houses. 2a. You can’t make much money fishing. b. You can’t make much money by fishing. 3a. People destroy the beauty of the mountains through littering. b. People destroy the beauty of the mountains littering.
More Patterns for Appalachian a- 1a. She was disCOVering a trail. b. She was FOLlowing a trai. 2a. She was rePEATing the chant. b. She was HOLlering the chant. 3a. They were FIGuring the change. b. They were forGETting the change. 4a. The baby was RECognizing her mother. b. The baby was WRECKing everything.
Deficit-Difference Controversy • In the 1960s-1970s, debated in educational circles • Some language scholars: dialect variation is simple a matter of difference, not deficit • Some educators: variation from the socially accepted standard constituted a fundamental deficiency.
Oakland “Ebonics Controversy” • Mid-1990s • Status of African American English • Ebonics as a separate language • Political and economic motivation • Proposed educational program • Outcome
Linguistic Society of America • 1997 Statement: • All human language systems – spoken, signed, and written – are fundamentally regular…. Characterizations of socially disfavored varieties as “slang, mutant, defective, ungrammatical, or broken English” are incorrect and demeaning.
Principle of Linguistic Subordination • The speech of a socially subordinate group will be interpreted as linguistically inadequate by comparison with that of the socially dominant group.
Dialect Myths & Reality Myth: A dialect is something that someone else speaks. Reality: Everyone who speaks a language speaks some dialect of that language; it is not possible to speak a language without speaking a dialect of the language.
Dialect Myths & Reality Myth: Dialects always have highly noticeable features that set them apart. Reality: Some dialects get much more attention than others, but the status of a dialect is unrelated to public commentary about its special characteristics.
Dialect Myths & Reality Myth: Only varieties of a language spoken by socially disfavored groups are dialects. Reality: The notion of dialect exists apart from social status or evaluation; there are socially favored as well as socially disfavored dialects.
Dialect Myths & Reality Myth: Dialects result from unsuccessful attempts to speak the ‘correct’ form of a language. Reality: Dialect speakers acquire their language by adopting the speech features of those around them, not be failing in their attempts to adopt standard language features.
Dialect Myths & Reality Myth: Dialects have no linguistic patterning in their own right; they are deviations from standard speech. Reality: Dialects, like all language systems, are systematic and regular; furthermore socially disfavored dialects can be described with the same kind of precision as standard language varieties.
Dialect Myths & Reality Myth: Dialects inherently carry negative social connotations. Reality: Dialects are not necessarily positively or negatively valued; their social values are derived strictly from the social position of their communities of speakers.
Dialects • Any distinct variety of a language, either regional, social, or age • Mutually intelligible • Same basic system of grammar with systematic differences • Regional dialects • Dialects spoken in a particular geographic region • Accents • Phonological (i.e., pronunciation) distinctions that convey information about a speaker’s dialect
American Dialects American dialects: How Linguists see them • What are the major US dialects that linguists identify?
American Dialects • Phonological (pronunciation) differences • Pin / pen • Mary / marry / merry • Which / witch • Creek • Harvard Yard • Caught / cot
American Dialects • Lexical (vocabulary) differences • Pail / bucket • Faucet / spigot / tap • Blinds / shades / curtains • Baby carriage / buggy • Coach / cab / taxi • Soda / pop • Frying pan / skillet • Parkway / freeway / thruway / expressway / turnpike • Drinking fountain / bubbler • Tram / street car
American Dialects • Syntactic (grammatical) differences • The house needs painted. • … where the streetcar bends the corner round. • John will eat, and Mary. • They done it. • He don’t know. • Just between you and I, …. • Take the 101 south.
American Dialects American 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 Dialects: How Hollywood sees them.
American Dialects - Discussion • Do you agree with the findings of Preston’s study that concludes that two of the low-prestige dialects in the U.S. are those spoken in NY and Texas? • As you were growing up, what dialects / accents did you make fun of? • What were some of its features? • Why was it considered funny?
Social Dialects - Standard American English (SAE) • What is it? • The dominant or prestige dialect? • The dialect used by political leaders and the upper socio-economic classes? • The dialect used for literature and printed documents? • The dialect taught in schools? • The dialect used by national news broadcasters? • SEA is an idealization – nobody speaks this dialect
Informal Standard English • Exists on a continuum, rather than a categorical notion • Flexible with respect to specific features of regional varieties • Specific criteria used to judge speech as standard • Defined in terms of what it is not • Avoidance of socially stigmatized forms – • double negatives – ‘They didn’t do nothing.’ • different verb agreement patterns – ‘They’s o.k.’ • different irregular verb forms – ‘She done it.’
Continuum of Standardness Standard--A---B---C---D---E—Nonstandard
Standard or non-standard? • He’s not as smart as I. • He’s not so smart as I. • He ain’t as smart as me. • He not as smart as me.
Standard or non-standard? • He’s not to do that. • He not supposed to do that. • He don’t supposed to do that. • He’s not supposed to do that.
Standard or non-standard? • I’m right, ain’t I? • I’m right, aren’t I? • I’m right, am I not? • I’m right, isn’t I? • I’m right, isn’t it?
Standard or non-standard? • A person should not change one’s speech. • One should not change one’s speech. • A person should not change their speech. • A person should not change his or her speech.
Academic Register • There is an academic register necessary for carrying out certain kinds of educational routines. • That register must be mastered for academic success. • But mastery or lack of mastery of that register has nothing to do with basic language capability.
‘Vernacular’ Dialects • Varieties of language that are not classified as standard dialects • Applied to spoken language • Exist on a continuum • Listener judgment essential in determining social unacceptability • Usually characterized by presence of stigmatized structures • Not all speakers use the entire set of structures associated with that dialect
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 • Which do you prefer? Why? Are they the same?
Social Dialects – African American English (AAE) • Origins of AAE • Historical discrimination: slavery, segregation, social isolation • Some Features of AAE • R-deletion (sore/saw, fort/fought, etc.) • Consonant cluster simplification (past/pass, etc.) • Loss of interdental fricatives (both > bof, etc.) • Double negatives (He don’t know nothing.) • ‘be’ deletion (He tired.) • Habitual ‘be’ (He be tired.)
Social Dialects – Latino (Hispanic) English • There is no homogeneous Latino dialect. • Puerto Rican English • Cuban English • Chicano English • Etc. • Bilingual Latinos engage in code-switching. • My mom fixes tamales verdes • Mi mamá hace green tamales • *My mom fixes verdes tamales. Why do people engage in code-switching?
Nonstandard Dialects of English - Summary Dialect variation is a matter of difference, not deficit. Nonstandard dialects are “self-contained” systems, with their regular phonological and syntactic rules. Nonstandard dialects are close relatives to SAE, sometimes reflecting older forms of SAE.
Social Dialects – Non-native Varieties of English • Origins: British and U.S. colonialism • Where these varieties are spoken • India, Singapore, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Nigeria, etcc. • These varieties are characterized by nativization: systematic changes in their formal features at all linguistic levels, which result from the use of English in new sociocultural settings, in contact with other languages, and in the absence of native speakers of English.
Examples of NN Varieties of English My friend wants to go down the bus. = get off Did you know that Richard is moving with Eunice? = courting Britain derecognized the DK in 1979. = withdraw diplomatic recognition This is an outstationcall. = out of town He overlistened to the boys’ conversation. = eavesdropped Most of the students here are bed-spacers. = room renters (no board) Our son is England-returned. = come back from England You have to be careful with these been-toboys. = who have returned from England