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    Dialectology

    Refers to the study of a particular

    variety of language within alanguage

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    English is not a uniform or

    monolithic languageMany national varieties exist

    American

    Australian

    British

    Canadian Irish

    New Zealand

    South African

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    English Varies

    From country to country

    Also varies within each country

    People refer to people in another part ofthe country as speaking with an accentdifferent from their own

    To a linguist everybody has a dialect

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    Dialect

    We could define dialect as a mutuallyintelligible form of a language that

    differs in systematic ways from anotherform

    We could define dialect as a variety of

    language spoken by the members of aparticular region or social community

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    Regional Dialect

    Refers to a set of linguistic

    features spread over a specificgeographic area

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    Social Dialect

    Refers to linguistic features shared

    by speakers of a social grouping

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    Dialect differences

    We distinguish a one dialect fromanother through (regional or social)

    differences in:Pronunciation

    Vocabulary

    Grammar

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    Pronunciation Differences

    Regional Differences

    North /grisi/

    South /grizi/

    Inland North /ay layk frayd kn/

    South Midland /a lak frad kn/

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    Vocabulary Differences

    Inland North Bean field

    South Midland Pea patch

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    Grammatical Differences

    Black English

    I have live three years in Atlanta

    (deletion of past tense morpheme)

    He be fooling around (Progressive formis different from the standard regional

    dialect)

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    Idiolect

    Refers to the peculiarity orcharacteristics of an individuals speech

    patterns pronunciation, grammar, orvocabulary

    My wife Julie pronounces vail as /vl/

    sail as / sl/ and mail as /ml/

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    Dialectologist

    We define dialectologist as a scholarwho studies varieties of language- both

    regional and social aspectsRegional Dialects (Inland North, South

    Midland, etc.

    Social Class (Upper class, workingclass, male,female differences

    Ethnic differences (Black ,Hispanic

    Yiddish,etc.)

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    Informant

    We define informant as a representativespeaker (specimen or guinea pig

    metaphorically) used for dialectinformation

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    Isogloss

    We define an isogloss as a line drawnon a map to show the outer -limits of a

    particular linguistic feature- or where aspeech feature is found

    We should not think of an isogloss as a

    dividing line between two usages, butrather the approximate outer limits of acertain feature

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    Total Pattern

    We refer to a feature which isapparently distributed throughout the

    entire vocabulary- such as the loss ofthe r in word medial and finalposition in New England dialect

    Neighbor / neb /

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    Partial Pattern

    Refers to the behavior of a speaker whouses a variation in pronunciation which

    is not consistent throughout the entiredialect.

    The Midland speaker who inserts an r

    as in worsh for wash will not carry thisfeature into other analogous words

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    Jargon

    We refer to words used in a profession,trade, or occupation- like morpheme,

    allophone, syntactic category, or bi-labial fricative in Linguistics

    Interface, boot up, format, down-load

    in computer talk Identifies the user as a student or

    practitioner in that field

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    Argot

    Refers to a variety of language used bymembers of a socially marginal group

    Narcotics dealers refers to :

    Hash forHashish

    Mainline for injecting directly into thebloodstream

    Uppers amphetamines

    Downers barbituates

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    Euphemism

    Refers to a less offensive or more politeword or phrase which replaces a taboo

    wordTo pass away for die

    Powder room for toilet

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    Idiom

    An idiom is a fixed phrase orexpression consisting of more than one

    word whose meaning cannot beinferred by knowing the meaning ofeach individual word

    Set her straightBe here in nothing flat

    By and large


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