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Foundations in Sociolinguistics: An Ethnographic Approach
Dell Hymes
- 01 May 1974
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TL;DR: The contribution of folklore to sociolinguistic research is discussed in this article, with a focus on poetics and the contribution of poetics to linguistics as a science of language and social life.
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Abstract: Introduction TOWARD ETHNOGRAPHIES OF COMMUNICATION 1. Toward ethnographies of communication 2. Studying the interaction of language and social life THE STATUS OF LINGUISTICS AS A SCIENCE 3. Why linguistics needs the sociologist 4. Social anthropology, sociolinguistics, and the ethnography of speaking 5. Bilingual education: linguistic vs. sociolinguistic bases 6. The contribution of folklore to sociolinguistic research 7. The contribution of poetics to sociolinguistic research LINGUISTICS AS SOCIOLINGUISTICS 8. Linguistic theory and functions in speech 9. Syntactic arguments and social roles: Quantifiers, Keys, and Reciprocal vs. Reflexive Relationships 10. The scope of sociolinguistics Bibliography Index
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Citations
Language and the Self: An Expanded View from a Symbolic Interactionist Perspective*
TL;DR: For instance, this paper explored the relationship between language and the self in symbolic interactionist accounts of human development and action and found that language and self are two of the most important elements in Mead's account.
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•Dissertation
Competing "Host" Discourses: Appropriation of Australian Aboriginal Culture in the Tourism Borderzones
Kristine R. Mroczek
- 01 Aug 2016
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the appropriation of Australian Aboriginal culture in the tourism borderzones of the USA and Australia.Competing “Host” Discourses:
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•Dissertation
Maturing Temporal Bones as Non-Neural Sites for Transforming the Speech Signal during Language Development
Lisa A. Hogan
- 12 Jul 2014
Abstract: 1 MATURING TEMPORAL BONES AS NON-NEURAL SITES FOR TRANSFORMING THE SPEECH SIGNAL DURING LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT Developmental events in the temporal bones shift the pattern of a given speech sound’s acoustic profile through the time children are mapping linguistic sound systems. Before age 5 years, frequency information in vowels is differentially accessible through the years children are acquiring the sound systems of their native language(s). To model the acoustic effects caused by developing temporal bones, data collected to elicit steady-state vowels from adult native speakers of English and Diné were modified to reflect the form of children’s hearing sensitivities at different ages based on patterns established in the psychoacoustic literature. It was assumed, based on the work of psychacousticians (e.g., Werner, Fay & Popper 2012; and Werner & Marean 1996), that the effects caused by immature temporal bones were conductive immaturities, and the age-sensitive filters were constructed based on psychoacoustic research into the hearing of infants and children. Data were partitioned by language, sex, and individual vowels and compared for points of similarity and difference in the way information in vowels is filtered because of the constraints imposed by the immaturity of the temporal bones.
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Person-descriptions in plea bargaining
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a selectional problem: of all the things that might be said of a person, how is something chosen for a particular conversation? The particular conversations forming the data for this study are transcribed plea negotiations from misdemeanor criminal cases, recorded among defense lawyers, district attorneys, and judges in a municipal court.
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The dynamics of Family Language Policy in a trilingual family: A longitudinal case study
Emilia Wąsikiewicz-Firlej,Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu,Hadrian Lankiewicz,Uniwersytet Gdański +3 more
- 25 Mar 2019
TL;DR: Wąsikiewicz-Firlej et al. as mentioned in this paper reported on the longitudinal case study of a Polish-Japanese family residing in the UK and the development of their family language policy.
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