Language Change

    Cards (35)

    • Historical influences
      450 AD - Latin words inherited from the church
      1400s - The Great Vowel Shift
      1476 - Caxton’s printing press
      1755 - Johnson’s Dictionary, removed words he didn’t like
      1806 - Webster’s Dictionary, aimed to promote American spelling
    • Processes
      Broadening
      Narrowing
      Amelioration
      Pejoration
      Coinage
      Compounding
      Clipping
      Borrowing
      Archaism
    • Prescriptivist
      want language to stay the same, has standards to follow
    • Descriptivist
      no judgement of language change
    • Aitchison’s metaphors
      The infectious disease - poor language is spread like a disease
      The crumbling castle - time breaks down language
      The damp spoon - language change is due to laziness
    • Change types
      Synchronic - look at current language
      Diachronic - language change over time
    • Milroy - No ‘Golden Age’ of language 

      no golden age, always evolving, all of society are never perfectly literate
    • Tree model
      language varies through generations
    • Schmidt - Wave model (1872)
      new words spread at different rates, then fizzle out
    • Bailey - Wave model ( 1973)

      language change impacted by geographical distance, word from USA will be used less in China
      cons - Trudgill (1974)
      • flow is not this smooth
      • not all countries receive all neologisms
    • S - Curve model - Chen and Bailey
      change in language starts off slow, rapidly increases, then levels off
    • David Crystal (2011)

      “all living languages change. They have to... the only languages that don’t change are dead ones.”
    • Substratum theory
      language is learnt imperfectly, then passed down to children.
    • Halliday - Functional Theory
      language changes to suit the needs of its users (eg. as a landscape changes, a map has to change to reflect it)
    • Hockett (1958) - Random Fluctuation Theory
      ‘language changes occur due to random errors and events’
      our language is a result of other people‘s mistakes
    • Deutscher (2005) - The unfolding of language
      motives for language change:
      • save effort, take shortcuts
      • extend meaning, original meaning lost
      • aims to find order and regularity
    • Theory of lexical gaps
      new words fill in gaps in languages when some words exist in some countries but not in others
    • Aitchison‘s potential, diffusion, implication, and codification model
      Potential- internal weakness or an external pressure for change
      Diffusion - change spreads through society
      Implication - becomes a new variant
      Codification- accepted and put into the dictionary
    • Humphreys
      ‘pillaging our punctuation, savaging our sentences and raping our vocabulary’
    • McArthur’s Wheel Model (1987)

      8 categories
      pros -
      • all varieties at equal distance from the centre, equal superiority
      • does not suggest it must have a particular origin
    • Philipson (1992) - Linguistic Imperlism
      spread of English has accompanied the political and economic intentions of English - speaking nations to conquer other countries
    • Diasphora
      the dispersal of people and languages to different parts of the world
      2 waves:
      1st dispersal - English used as a native language
      2nd dispersal- English used as a lingua franca and adopted as a 2nd official language
    • Schneider’s dynamic model of post-colonial Englishes (2007)
      1. foundation, English brought to a new territory
      2. exonormative stabilisation, bilingualism spreading
      3. nativisation, native speakers form their own form of English
      4. endonormative stabilisation, new norms accepted
      5. differentiation, varieties emerge
    • Kachru’s concentric circles (1992)

      Inner circle - English used as a Native language (eg. USA)
      Outer circle - English used as a 2nd language (eg. Nigeria)
      Expanding circle - countries where an English is only used as a lingua franca (eg. China)
    • Cons of Kachru’s concentric circles
      • does not address the diversity within Englishes, eg. accents
      • does not consider proficiency
      • labels suggest judgement about ‘better usage’ (inner circle have superiority because they use it most, a Chinese person may use English better than someone in the inner circle)
    • Strevens (1980)
      all English varieties have either British or American standards as their root
      cons - don’t consider varieties derived from countries without connections to US or British roots (eg. Chinglish)
    • Crystal - Tide metaphor
      language is like the tide, it neither progresses or decays, it changes naturally over time
    • Aitchison’s process of language change 

      Potential, diffusion, innovation, codification
    • Change from above
      eg. French Academy
      Choose what words can and can’t be used and publish them into dictionary (controlled by Government)
    • Change from below
      eg. teens
      New trending words are published into the dictionary due to popularity
    • Political Correctness
      aims to allow and encourage social progress
    • Linguistic Determinism
      Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis -
      language controls and determines the way we think.
    • criticisms of political correctness
      • censorship endangers free speech
      • marginalises words
      • enforces rarely consult minorities on their desire to change words to be PC
    • Mackinnon (1996)
      suggested language can be seen as:
      • correct or incorrect
      • pleasant or ugly
      • useful to us or useless
      • socially acceptable or unacceptable
      • appropriate or inappropriate
    • The Great Vowel Shift (1400s)
      a change in vowel pronunciation lead to standardisation of the English language
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