Language change

    Cards (46)

    • What is neosemy?
      Words getting new meaning
    • What is generalisation?
      Where the meaning of a word broadens, e.g. place used to mean street
    • What is specialisation?
      Where the meaning of a word narrows, e.g. wife used to mean any woman
    • What is amelioration?
      Where a word becomes more positive, e.g. pretty used to mean cunning
    • What is pejoration?
      Where a word becomes more negative, e.g. villain used to mean farm worker
    • What is weakening?
      Where the force of a word reduces, e.g. terribly is a mild intensifier now
    • What is a metaphor in language change?
      Where words become more abstract, e.g. grasp meaning understanding
    • What is euphemism?
      Where a word is used to prevent rudeness, e.g. restroom for toilet
    • What is polysemy?
      Words with multiple meanings, e.g. park
    • What is coinage?
      Deliberate creation of a word, e.g. addiction is a word made by Shakespeare
    • What is borrowing?
      Taking a word from elsewhere, e.g. alcohol from Arabic
    • What is compounding?
      Combining two words together without removing from either, e.g. user-friendly
    • What is clipping?
      Shortening words, e.g. rizz
    • What is blending?
      Combining words whilst taking away from one or both, e.g. brunch
    • What is an acronym?
      Wording out the first letters of a phrase, e.g. LOL
    • What is initialism?
      Spelling out the first letters of a phrase, e.g. OMG
    • What is affixation?
      Free morpheme + bound morpheme, e.g. re-gift
    • What is conversion?
      Where a word shifts class, e.g. google from noun to verb
    • What is an eponym?
      Names of people becoming words, e.g. Sandwich
    • What is back formation?
      Verb created by suffix removal, e.g. locate from location
    • What was the Inkhorne controversy?
      Renaissance writers took vocabulary from other languages, referred to by critics as ‘strange Inkhorne terms’, with their being temporary said to corrupt language
    • What did Wordsworth say about language change?
      Advocated for the ‘authentic’ use of language of ordinary people in his poetry - descriptivist approach
    • What did Swift have to say about language change?
      Published a proposal for fixing the English language, disliking vagueness, clipping and unnecessary, blaming poets for shortening to fit rhythyms
    • What is the Academie de Francaise?
      An official body which tries to prevent anglicisation of French
    • What were Aitchinson’s three proposals of prescriptivists views?
      Crumbling castle, infectious disease, damp spoon
    • What was Aitchinson’s PIDC theory?
      Potential for change, implementation, diffusion and codification
    • What was Howard’s euphemism treadmill?
      Politicallt correct terms eventually become offensive themself and are replaced, e.g. dwarf
    • What was Halliday’s functional theory?
      Language changes according to the needs of its users linked to simplification like clippings
    • What was Goodman’s informalisation theory?
      Modern language is characterised by informalisation, with Fairclough finding this was most prominent in the workplace
    • What is the etymological fallacy theory?
      The view that the historical meaning of a word is the best
    • What was Mackinnon’s model of language?
      Language can either be or not be: correct, pleasant, socially acceptable, morally acceptable, appropriate or useful
    • What is the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?
      Language affects thought
    • What is the simplified spelling board?
      Attempted to simplify and standardise, e.g. thru for through but only some changes like color were accepted
    • What is the King’s English society?
      They seek to preserve traditions and standards - linguistic conservatism
    • What did Priestly suggest about language reformation?
      He was a descriptivist who suggested it is ill calculated to reform languages and the best form will emerge from its superiority
    • What was Haugen’s standardisation process?
      Selection, codification, elaboration and implementation
    • What was Chen’s S curve model?
      Resistance followed by accelerated change then stability - common in digital age, e.g. selfie
    • What was Bailey‘s wave model?
      A series of waves which affect larger and larger portions of the population, e.g. they as a non gendered pronoun
    • What is lexical gap theory?
      Language is underscored by needs and experiences of a population - when there is a gap where no word describes something, a term is coined or borrowed, e.g. blog
    • What is substratum theory?
      Language change is down to contact with other groups, sped up by globalisation, we learn the word imperfectly and pass this imperfection on