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Cards (14)
Emma Moore
(
2010
) studied patterns of variation in speech among teenage girls in
Bolton
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Found that non-standard 'were'
,
as in 'She were'
,
was common in their dialect
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Some girls used
non-standard 'were'
to signal their
localness
to their
area
, reflecting
Labov's Martha's Vineyard
study
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Identified four "Communities of Practice" within the school:
The Populars
: rebellious, anti-school, drinking/smoking
The Townies
: drug taking, sexual activity
The Geeks
: institutionally orientated
The Eden Valley Girls
: privileged, dancers/shoppers
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All girls were
upper working class
or
lower middle class
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Found that
Eden Valley Girls
used
standard 'was'
all the time due to
higher class
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Other three groups had
mixed classes
, and
non-standard 'were'
could reflect
social status
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Concluded that although
class
was a
factor
, there was no single
explanation
for its use
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William Labov
(1966) investigated
social stratification
of the
pronunciation
of the /
r
/ in
New York
department stores
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Pronunciation
of /r/ depended on
social-class
membership;
higher socioeconomic
status pronounced /r/ more
frequently
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Basil Bernstein
(1971) theorised two types of language:
restricted
code and
elaborated
code
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Restricted Code
:
Working classes
tend to use this
Characterised
by
short
,
simple
, sometimes
incomplete
sentences;
limited
use of
adjectives
and
adverbs
; use of
idiom
and
reliance
on
implicit
meaning.
Middle
and
upper
classes use this code when talking to
friends
and
family
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Elaborated Code:
Used by
middle
and
upper
classes
Characterised by more
complex
, grammatically
complete
sentences; wide range of
adjectives
,
adverbs
and
conjunctions
and
explicit
meanings
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Claimed that the
working class
were
disadvantaged
as
education
uses a lot of
elaborated code
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