Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Diversity Within English Essay -- essays research papers
 Diversity Within English      Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In order to understand how language variation descriptors are used, we  first must understand what language variation is. We can say that the U.S. is  linguistically diverse because of the multitude of languages spoken here, but  we can also find diversity within these languages. All languages have both  dialectical variations and registral variations. These variations, or dialects,  can differ in lexicon, phonology, and/or syntax from the Standard Language that  we often think of as Ã
âcorrect' Language, although they are not necessarily less  proper than, say, Standard English. It depends on where, by whom, and in what  situation the dialect is used as to whether or not it is appropriate.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Most people are familiar with regional dialects, such as Boston,  Brooklyn, or Southern. These types of variations usually occur because of  immigration and settlement patterns. People tend to seek out others like  themselves. Regional variations tend to become more pronounced as the speech  community is more isolated by physical geography, i.e. mountain ranges, rivers.  Linguists have done extensive studies on regional dialects, producing detailed  Linguistic Atlases. Many linguists can tell where a person is from just by  knowing whether a person carries groceries home from the supermarket in a paper  bag or from the grocery store in a paper sack (Yule 184). And the person who  comes home from the supermarket with a paper sack serves to remind us that  language variation is not a discrete, but rather a continuous variable.  Characteristics of the dialect are more pronounced in the center of the speech  community and tend to be less discernible at the outer boundaries, where they  often overlap other regional dialects.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Within, and between, these regional variations we find the social  dialects. The primary social factors that influence dialects are class,  education, occupation, ethnicity, sex, and age (Ferguson 52, Yule 191). And  social dialects can vary on any or all three descriptor levels; syntax or  grammar, lexicon or vocabulary, and phonetics or pronunciation. Social  dialects are also where the described differences are often defined as  stigmatized or nonstigmatized (Ferguson 52). Stigmatized items include use of  the double negative (grammar), substituting the d sound for t...              ...frequency. Using in' for ing, as in goin' is universal across  status groups, but it is found almost twice as often in the lower working class  than in the lower middle class, and almost four times more than in the upper  middle class (Ferguson 61).  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  With all these different variables that intersect and overlap with the  different dialect variations is is a wonder that any sense can be made of  American English at all. But there two other important point to remember.  Language universals such as displacement, arbitrariness, productivity, cultural  transmission, discreteness and duality are unique to human language (Yule 22)  and provides a base or norm for measuring variations. Implicational  relationships provide a way of measuring relative distance between the different  variations and also serve as a means to predict changes in individual dialects  (Ferguson 66).    Works Consulted    Ferguson, Charles A., and Shirley Brice Heath, eds. Language in the USA.  Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1981.    Piatt, Bill. Only English? Law and Language Policy in the United States.  Albuquerque: U of New Mexico P, 1990.    Yule, George. The Study of Language. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1985.                       
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