nativisation, native speakers form their own form of English
endonormative stabilisation, new norms accepted
differentiation, varieties emerge
Kachru’sconcentric circles (1992)
Innercircle - English used as a Nativelanguage (eg. USA)
Outercircle - English used as a 2ndlanguage (eg. Nigeria)
Expandingcircle - countries where an English is only used as a lingua franca (eg. China)
Cons of Kachru’sconcentric circles
does not address the diversity within Englishes, eg. accents
does not consider proficiency
labels suggest judgementabout‘betterusage’ (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 Englishvarieties have either British or Americanstandardsas their root
cons - don’t consider varieties derived from countries withoutconnectionstoUSorBritishroots (eg. Chinglish)
Crystal - Tide metaphor
language is like the tide, it neitherprogresses or decays, it changesnaturallyovertime
Aitchison’sprocess of language change
Potential, diffusion, innovation,codification
Change from above
eg. FrenchAcademy
Choose what words can and can’t be used and publish them into dictionary (controlledbyGovernment)
Change from below
eg. teens
New trending words are published into the dictionary duetopopularity
PoliticalCorrectness
aims to allow and encouragesocialprogress
LinguisticDeterminism
Sapir-WhorfHypothesis -
languagecontrols and determines the waywethink.
criticisms of politicalcorrectness
censorship endangersfreespeech
marginaliseswords
enforces rarely consult minorities on their desire to change words to be PC
Mackinnon (1996)
suggestedlanguage can be seenas:
correct or incorrect
pleasant or ugly
useful to us or useless
sociallyacceptable or unacceptable
appropriate or inappropriate
The Great Vowel Shift (1400s)
a change in vowel pronunciation lead to standardisation of the English language