English Language - Language Change (AO2)

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Functional Theory (Halliday)

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Functional Theory (Halliday)

Language alters as needs of users alter. New lexemes appear as they are required for new inventions, ideas, etc. Other lexemes become archaic once they are unnecessary in real life, e.g. garments such as doublet and kirtle no longer worn so their names no longer relevant.

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Lexical Gap Theory

New lexemes coined through necessity to fill ‘lexical gaps’. These neologisms will not already be in use, but will fit current patterns within language, may also fill phonological gaps, e.g. git, get and gut already exist, so gat could fill a lexical gap.

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Random Fluctuation (Postal)

Language is as unpredictable as fashion; hard to foresee future trends.

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Random Fluctuation (Hockett)

Believed change so unpredictable due to errors which occur by chance and then transmitted through contact, e.g. ‘pwned’ for ‘owned’ has spread in online gaming.

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Linguistic Reflectionism

Theory that a person’s language reflects their way of thinking; use of sexist language reflects sexist viewpoint.

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Linguistic Determinism

Idea that language can determine thought; if a person has non-sexist language available to them, less likely to hold sexist attitudes.

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Linguistic Relativism

Idea that language a person speaks has an influence on this person’s thought.

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8

Process of Standardisation (Haugen)

Selection: prestigious variety of a language is chosen.

Codification: linguistic norms are established, reducing internal variability.

Elaboration: language is developed for a variety of purposes.

Implementation: language variety is given currency through production of (official) written texts.

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9

Economy as Progress (Jespersen)

Considers language change as progressive when it creates economy; change is progress when we can ‘express the greatest amount of meaning with the simplest mechanism’.

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Language change as a slow decay - Aitchison’s metaphorical models

- Damp spoon syndrome: Attitude that slovenliness and laziness are leading to change and variation in language, like placing a damp spoon in the sugar bowl.

- Crumbling castle: View that the English language is a beautiful old building that needs to be preserved, but has long passed its pinnacle

- Infectious disease: Changes are ‘caught’ through contact with dangerous/inferior varieties

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Substratum Theory

Attributes language change to influence of variety with lower prestige/power. Comes about through direct contact, e.g. migration or invasion. Indigenous population may learn conquerors’ language but imperfectly. Slight imperfections handed down through generations, eventually altering the language.

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Recency Illusion (Arnold Zwicky, 2005)

Describes belief that a word, phrase, grammatical construction or word meaning is recent when it has existed for a long time - "the belief that things you have noticed only recently are in fact recent." E.g. use of ‘they’/’them’/’their’ as singular pronouns but found in Jane Austen’s and Shakespeare’s works.

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Frequency Illusion (Zwicky, 2005)

once you’ve noticed a phenomenon, you think it happens a whole lot, even “all the time”. Your estimates of frequency are likely to be skewed by your noticing nearly every occurrence that comes past you.”

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Adolescent Illusion (Zwicky, 2005)

Belief that young people are responsible for 'undesirable' language trends. E.g. text speak and abbreviations often associated with teenagers but are used by texting and e-mailing adults of all ages. 

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Selective Attention (Zwicky)

Claims these illusions are effect of what he refers to as selective attention, positing a general theory based on what an individual happens to have noticed. Type of cognitive bias

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Text Message Illusions (Crystal)

  • Text messages aren't full of abbreviations - typically less than ten percent of the words use them. [Frequency Illusion]

  • These abbreviations aren't a new language - they've been around for decades. [Recency Illusion]

  • They aren't just used by kids - adults of all ages and institutions are the leading texters these days. [Adolescent Illusion]

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Attitude Towards Regional Variation (Freeborn, 1986)

  1. The incorrectness view: All accents are incorrect compared to Standard English and the accent of RP.  

  2. The ugliness view: Some accents don’t sound nice.  This seems to be linked to stereotypes and negative social connotations.  

  3. The impreciseness view: Some accents are described as ‘lazy’ and ‘sloppy’ such as Estuary English, where sounds are omitted and changed.  

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Wave model (Bailey)

New aspect of language (innovation) is initiated in one place at one time and spreads outwards from that point (like an earthquake). Different innovations spread at different rates, in different directions, so that the areas covered by different innovations may not coincide e.g. ‘plimsolls’ called ‘daps’ in Bristol.

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S-curve model of diffusion (Chen, 1972)

Pronunciation change occurs on one or small number of words. Innovation then gathers momentum and rate of diffusion to other lexemes becomes rapid. After a while, critical point is reached and rate of change slows or stops.

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Polarised views to language (Mackinnon)

Language is viewed towards extremes e.g. correct/incorrect, pleasant/ugly, socially acceptable/unacceptable.

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Feminism and linguistic reform - Anne Pauwels

Notion that reforms have taken place at institutional level (law, broadcast media) to achieve linguistic equality. Non-sexist guidelines adopted by media have been salient in promoting feminist language reform.

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Diachronic linguistics

Study of changes in language over time. Can be general evolution of all languages or evolution of particular language or dialect. Might focus more on interplay of historical events and language changes.

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Synchronic linguistics

Study of linguistics and usage of a language at a particular moment.

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External influence

Source is another language e.g. loanwords.

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Internal influence

Source is same language e.g. compounds.

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Neologism

Brand new lexeme.

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Lexical borrowing

Lexemes (loanwords) absorbed by one language through contact with another.

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Neosemy

New meaning exists for an existing word (virus, pirate). Original lexeme and semantic meaning exists alongside the new.

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Semantic shift

Change in a word’s meaning over time.

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Levels of synonymy

As a language absorbs loanwords, some will be similar in meaning to existing lexemes. Meanings can diverge to become more semantically specific in terms of context for use, formality or connotation.

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Standardisation

When conventional forms of a language are established and maintained; may occur as a natural development or effort by members of a community to impose one dialect or variety as a standard.

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Ascertainment

Making language usage certain; fixing/freezing a language in one state.

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Codification

When certain linguistic features recognised as standard and others rejected; designing a writing system or conventions for a language.

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Regularisation

‘Neatening’ of language elements to fit prominent patterns, e.g. stadia becoming stadiums. Tendency to convert irregular verbs to fit regular morphological patterns, e.g. snuck becoming sneaked.

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Prescriptivism

‘Neatening’ of language elements to fit prominent patterns, e.g. stadia becoming stadiums. Tendency to convert irregular verbs to fit regular morphological patterns, e.g. snuck becoming sneaked.

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Descriptivism

View that language is defined by what people actually do with it. Studying usage of real people in a real-world context allows us to uncover principles of a language.

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Informalisation

Trend for a language, particularly in written mode, to become more informal over time.

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38

Inkhorn term

Lexical borrowing into English considered unnecessary or pretentious, especially during Renaissance.

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39

Diffusion

Spread of a change, especially sound change, through a language.

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40

Transmission

‘passing on’ of linguistic characteristics. May be through contact between two communities, influence may be adstratum, substratum or superstratum. Cultural transmission refers to passing via social learning mechanisms such as imitation, teaching or language.

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41

Theoretical models of the pattern of vowel change (the great vowel shift)

Pull theory: upper vowels moved first and ‘pulled’ the lower ones along. Push theory: lower vowels moved forward and up, pushing the others ahead.

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