Dialects The accents of Language .

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Dialects The accents of Language http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=l9oIvsk7cvw

Transcript of Dialects The accents of Language .

Page 1: Dialects The accents of Language .

DialectsThe accents of Language

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9oIvsk7cvw

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The Geography of Language

La Geografía del Idioma

La Géographie de Langue

La Geografia di Lingua

Die Geographie der Sprache

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Language Defined

Organized system of spoken words by which people communicate with one another with mutual comprehension (Getis, 1985).

• Languages subtly gradate one to another.

•Dialects and other regional differences may eventually lead to incomprehensibility - a new language.

• Two methods that define how ONE language can become TWO or more.

Migration and Isolation

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Geographer’s Perspective on Language

• Language is an essential element of culture, possibly the most important medium by which culture is transmitted.

• Languages even structure the perceptions of their speakers. Attitudes, understandings, and responses are partly determined by the words available.

• Languages are a hallmark of cultural diversity with distinctive regional distributions.

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Language Distribution indicates

• History and conquest• Isolation or integration of cultures• Migration of peoples• Economic Domination of certain cultures• Influence of wealth and technology • Political Divisions (country boundaries)• Physical geography barriers (mts.,

deserts)

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Roots of Language

How to Write Down a Language?

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Roots of Language

Ideograms – A graphic symbol that represents an idea.

Examples:- Sumerian; Chinese;

Egyptian; Japanese

How to Write Down a Language?

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Roots of Language

How to Write Down a Language?

Phonetic

- Most languages, including Romance languages

Symbols (letters) represent sounds, not ideas. A phonetic alphabet is the key innovation.

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Key Terms DIALECT - a regional variety of a language distinguished by pronunciation, spelling, and vocabulary.

Social Dialects - can denote social class and standing.

Vernacular Dialects - the common, slang, speech of a region.

TermIs he fair dinkum? Why I declare!Down by the crickbludger mosquito hawknappies

MeaningIs he real or genuine? That’s remarkable!Down by the stream (creek)freeloader; welfare dragon flydiapers

LocationAustraliaDeep South (U.S.)Middle Atlantic StatesAustraliaSouth (U.S.)Britain; Brit. Colonies

Sounds Familiar - English translated to English! Website

Common American Slang

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English to English Migration

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Germanic Branch - EnglishDiffused throughout the world by hundreds of years of British colonialism. Brought to New World by British colonies in 1600s. Has become an important global lingua franca. (a common language.)

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Development of English Germanic Tribes (Germany/Denmark)

• Jutes

• Angles

• Saxons

Vikings (Norway)

• 9th - 11th Centuries

Normans (French)

• Battle of Hastings, 1066

• French was official language for 150 years.

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Development of English - Adopted Words

Germanic Tribes (Germany/Denmark)

• kindergarten, angst, noodle, pretzel

Vikings (Norway)

• take, they, reindeer, window

Normans (French)

• renaissance, mansion, village, guardian

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English settle in America

Jolly old Bean, What do you say?

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Differences between the English and American Language

Vocabulary: settlers encountered new objects, animals and experiences that lacked names. Natives also helped with many names…. Canoes, squash

Spelling: US wanted independent identity.

Noah Webster wanted to establish a separate language from England for America. He ignored rules and used letters or did not use letters the English did. honor, defense

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English Speaking Countries

English is the official language of 57 countries. All laws, signs, documents are printed in the official language.

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Interesting Facts about the English Language

• English is spoken as a first language by 427 million

• English is spoken as a second language by another 350 million

• English is the most widely taught language in over 100 countries

• In 70 countries English has official status: – more than any other language

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Key TermsPIDGIN –

Examples include Hawaiian Pidgin and the creoles of West Africa that resulted from the slave trade.

“No eat da candy, Bruddah, it's pilau. Da thing wen fall on da ground.”

pidgin language, is a simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups that do not have a language in common.

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Give us da food we need fo today an every day.Hemmo our shame, an let us goFo all da kine bad stuff we do to you,Jalike us guys let da odda guys go awready,And we no stay huhu wit demFo all da kine bad stuff dey do to us.No let us get chance fo do bad kine stuff,But take us outa dea, so da Bad Guy no can hurt us.Cuz you our King.You get da real power,An you stay awesome foeva.Dass it!”

Matthew 6:9-13 “The Lord’s Prayer”

- Taken from Da Jesus Book, a twelve year effort by 6 linguists to translate the New Testament into Hawaiian Pidgin, published 2001

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Key Terms CREOLE - a language that results from the mixing of a colonizer’s language with an indigenous language. Often they are pidgins.

a. mo pe aste sa bananb. de bin alde luk dat big tric. a waka go a wosud. olmaan i kas-im cheke. li pote sa bay mof. ja fruher wir bleibeng. dis smol swain i bin go fo maket

I am buying the bananathey always looked for a big treehe walked homethe old man is cashing a checkhe brought that for meYes at first we remainedthis little pig went to market

Can you guess which colonizing language is the base for each of the following creole examples? New Orleans’

French Quarter

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Key Terms

From Pidgin to Creole

a. mo pe aste sa bananb. de bin alde luk dat big tric. a waka go a wosud. olmaan i kas-im cheke. li pote sa bay mof. ja fruher wir bleibeng. dis smol swain i bin go fo maket

French based Seychelles Creole English based Roper River Creole English based SaranEnglish based Cape York Creole French based GuyanaisGerman based Papua New Guinea Pidgin German English based Cameroon Pidgin

Can you guess which colonizing language is the base for each of the following creole examples? New Orleans’

French Quarter

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Spanglish

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-n0hr4ViFAA

The mix between English and Spanish- becoming more common as the Spanish population grows in America.

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Key TermsISOLATED LANGUAGE - a language that is not related to any other languages and thus not connected to any language families. Examples include Basque and Korean.

Basque Spain

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Language and the Environment

TOPONYM - a place name. These are language on the land, reflecting past inhabitants and their relation to the land.

Devil’s Tower, WY

The name Devil's Tower originated in 1875 during an expedition and misinterpreted the natives the name to mean Bad God's Tower. This was later shortened to the Devil's Tower.

Arizona, Death Valley- given the name because of pioneers who were lost there during the 1850’s.

Cook Islands, Polynesia-

Captain James Cook arrived in 1773 and 1777 and named the islands.

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World’s Top 10 Languages• Mandarin Chinese 726 Million• English 427 Million• Spanish 266 Million• Hindi 182 Million• Arabic 181 Million• Portuguese 165 Million• Bengali 162 Million• Russian 158 Million• Japanese 124 Million• German 121 Million