Chapter 1: What Do Sociolinguists Study? PDF

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Anton Wahyana

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sociolinguistics language and society linguistic variables social variables

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This presentation explores sociolinguistics by examining the relationship between language and society. It includes examples and discussions about linguistic variables (like pronunciation and syntax), and social variables (like age, gender, and education). The presentation also touches on different language functions and formality scales, demonstrating how social contexts impact language use.

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Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Introduction ! Linguistics: The scientific study of language. ! Society: The community of people living in a particular region and having shared customs, laws and organizations. ! Sociolinguistics: The study of the relationship between language and society....

Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Introduction ! Linguistics: The scientific study of language. ! Society: The community of people living in a particular region and having shared customs, laws and organizations. ! Sociolinguistics: The study of the relationship between language and society. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA What do sociolinguists study? ! Linguistic variables (e.g.: pronunciation, syntax, morphology... etc.) ! Social variables (e.g.: age, gender, education, class, ethnicity... etc.) Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Example #1: Ray: Hi mum. Mum: Hi. You’re late. Ray: Yeah, that bastard Sootbucket kept us in again. Mum: Nana’s here. Ray: Oh sorry. Where is she? Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Example #2: Ray: Good afternoon, Sir. Principal: What are you doing here at this time? Ray: Mr. Sutton kept us in, Sir. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Notes on Examples #1 and #2 " Our linguistic choices are affected by: ① Who can hear us. ② Where we are talking. ③ How we feel. " Our linguistic choices can give us non-linguistic information: Ray’s choice of words provides information about his relationship with his mother (close - informal) and with the principal (distant – formal). Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA " Language can serve different functions: We can ask for information (questions), give information (representatives), express admiration or annoyance (expressives), offer something (commissives) and make changes (declarations). Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Example #3: ! Every afternoon my friend packs her bag and leaves her Cardiff office in southern Wales about 5 o’clock. As she leaves, her business partner says goodbye Margret, (she replies goodbye Mike), her secretary says see you tomorrow (she replies bye Jill) and the caretaker says bye Mrs. Walker (to which she responds goodbye Andy). As she arrives home she is greeted by Hi mum from her daughter, Jenny, hello dear, have a good day? from her mother and simply you’re late again from her husband. Later in the evening the president of the local flower club calls to ask if she would like to join the club. Good evening, is that Mrs. Billington? She asks. No, it’s Margret Walker. But my husbands’ name is David Billington, Margret answers. What can I do for you? Finally a friend calls Hello Meg, sut wyt ti? Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Notes on example #3 SPEAKER TITLE Business partner Goodbye Margret Secretary “avoided mentioning names or titles” Caretaker Bye Mrs. Walker Daughter Hi mum Mother Hello dear, have a good day? Husband You’re late again President of the local flower Good evening, is that Mrs. club Billington? Friend Hello Meg, sut wyt ti? Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA ! The lady was addressed with different names/ titles but they are all appropriate. ! The relationship between the addresser and addressee plays an important role. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Example #4: Sam: You seen our ‘enry’s new ‘ouse yet? It’s on ‘alton you know. Jim: I have indeed. I could hardly miss it Sam. Your Henry now owns the biggest house in Halton. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Notes on example #4: ! The choice of words and ways of pronunciations convey social information. ! The [h]- dropping reflects Sam and Jim’s different education and occupations. ! Although they come from the same region, they have different social backgrounds which is reflected in their speech. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Example #5: a) Refuse should be deposited in the receptacle provided. b) Put your rubbish in the bin, Jilly. c) Please tender exact fare and state destination. d) Give me the right money and tell me where you’re going. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Notes on example #5: ! Both pairs of statements (a, b) and (c, d) convey the same message but they differ in grammar and vocabulary. ! Using the passive grammatical structure, impersonal style and less frequent words increases distance and is formal. ! Using the active grammatical structure, personal style, and common words decreases distance and is less formal. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA ! Although they have the same meaning, they are NOT interchangeable. ! If a mother addresses her son with sentence (a), it would sound awkward and even funny. It would not fulfill the same purpose. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Why do people speak differently? A. Social Factors: 1. The participants: # Who is speaking? (speaker, writer) # Who are they speaking to? (listener, reader) Age, gender, education, occupation, social status, social distance, ethnicity...etc. can all affect the linguistic choices of the participants. 2. The setting or social context of the interaction: Where are they speaking? e.g.: home, school, mosque, shop, office, cafe...etc. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA 3. The topic: What is being talked about? e.g.: studying for an exam, going to a party, inviting a friend,...etc. 4. The function: Why are they speaking? e.g.: Give information, order, offer, express feelings...etc. (language functions). Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA B. Social Dimensions: 1. The social distance scale 2. The status scale 3. The formality scale 4. The functional scale Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA 1. The social distance scale ! It is concerned with the relationship between the participants. ! It emphasizes how well the participants know each other. ! The more formal the language is, the more distance there is between the participants. When distance INCREASES, solidarity DECREASES. ! Formal Language $ More Distance $ Less Solidarity = Distant Relationship (When Ray uses the title “sir” to address the principal in example #2). Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA ! The less formal the language is, the less distance between the participants. When distance DECREASES, solidarity INCREASES. ! Informal Language $ Less Distance $ More Solidarity = Close Relationship (When Ray addresses his mother with “mum” and uses swear words in example #1). Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA 2. The status scale ! It is also concerned with the relationship between participants. ! If the speaker is of a lower status than the addresser, he/ she has to use formal language and use titles to show respect. However, if the speaker is of a higher status than the addressee, he/ she has the choice to either use formal or informal language. ! Higher status can be attained by class, occupation, education...etc. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA ! Example #2: Ray’s choice of using “sir” shows that the principal was of a higher status. ! Example #3: The use of “Mrs. Walker” by the caretaker reflects the higher status of Margret Walker. ! Example #4:Sam’s [h]-dropping reflects his lower social group status in the society as a whole. Superior $ Subordinate High status $ Low status Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA 3. The formality scale ! It is concerned with the setting or the type of interaction. ! The language used will be influenced by the formality of the setting. ! The degrees of formality are often determined by solidarity and relationships but not always. ! In a court room, the language is highly formal regardless of the personal relationships. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA FORMAL INFORMAL At the bank: Addressing the At a café: Addressing a bank manager at his office. friend. At the mosque: Addressing At home: Addressing a a stranger. sibling. Written notices are mostly Spoken language is mainly formal and impersonal. less formal than written one. For a friendly chat, people use colloquial. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA Setting: ! Formal $ High formality $ More distance $ Less solidarity ! Informal $ Low formality $ Less distance $ More solidarity Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA 4. The functional scale ! Language serves many functions but mainly two: ① Give objective information $ Referential function ② Express feelings $Affective function Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA ! Our speech can have both functions but one function will dominate. The more referential information a message conveys, the less it tends to express the speaker’s feelings and vice versa. ! E.g.: Ray’s “yeah, that bastard Sootbucket kept us in again” conveys information about why he was late and also how he felt about it. Presented by: ANTON WAHYANA

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