Sociolinguistics LEARNING ABOUT LANGUAGE

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Sociolinguistics LEARNING ABOUT LANGUAGE An Introduction to Sociolinguistics LEARNING ABOUT LANGUAGE General Editors: Geoffrey Leech & Mick Short, Lancaster University Already published: Analysing Sentences (2nd edition) Noel Burton-Roberts Words and Their Meaning Howard Jackson An Introduction to Phonology Francis Katamba Grammar and Meaning Howard Jackson Realms of Meaning: An Introduction to Semantics Th. R. Hofmann An Introduction to Psycholinguistics Danny D. Steinberg An Introduction to Spoken Interaction Anna-Brita Stenström Watching English Change Laurie Bauer Meaning in Interaction: An Introduction to Pragmatics Jenny Thomas An Introduction to Cognitive Linguistics Friedrich Ungerer and Hans-Jörg Schmid Exploring the Language of Poems, Plays and Prose Mick Short Contemporary Linguistics: An Introduction William O’Grady, Michael Dobrovolsky and Francis Katamba Analysing Sentences Noel Burton-Roberts An Introduction to Natural Language Processing Through Prolog Clive Matthews An Introduction to Child Language Development Susan Foster-Cohen The Sounds of Language: An Introduction to Phonetics Henry Rogers An Introduction to Foreign Language Learning and Teaching Keith Johnson An Introduction to Sociolinguistics (4th edition) Janet Holmes An Introduction to Sociolinguistics Fourth Edition JANET HOLMES First published 1992 by Pearson Education Limited Second edition published 2001 Third edition published 2008 Fourth edition published 2013 Published 2013 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017, USA Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business Copyright © 1992, 2001, 2008, 2013, Taylor & Francis. The right of Janet Holmes to be identified as author of this Work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Notices Knowledge and best practice in this field are constantly changing. As new research and experience broaden our understanding, changes in research methods, professional practices, or medical treatment may become necessary. Practitioners and researchers must always rely on their own experience and knowledge in evaluating and using any information, methods, compounds, or experiments described herein. In using such information or methods they should be mindful of their own safety and the safety of others, including parties for whom they have a professional responsibility. To the fullest extent of the law, neither the Publisher nor the authors, contributors, or editors, assume any liability for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions, or ideas contained in the material herein. ISBN 13: 978-1-4082-7674-7 (pbk) British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress Typeset in 9/12.5pt Stone Serif by 35 For Rob This page intentionally left blank Brief Contents Preface xii Author’s Acknowledgements xvi Publisher’s Acknowledgements xvii 1 What do sociolinguists study? 1 Section I Multilingual Speech Communities 17 2 Language choice in multilingual communities 19 3 Language maintenance and shift 53 4 Linguistic varieties and multilingual nations 76 5 National languages and language planning 100 Section II Language Variation: Focus on Users 129 6 Regional and social dialects 131 7 Gender and age 159 8 Ethnicity and social networks 186 9 Language change 206 Section III Language Variation: Focus on Uses 237 10 Style, context and register 239 11 Speech functions, politeness and cross-cultural communication 274 12 Gender, politeness and stereotypes 301 13 Language, cognition and culture 337 14 Analysing discourse 363 15 Attitudes and applications 409 16 Conclusion 439 References 454 Appendix: phonetic symbols 475 Glossary 477 Index 479 vii This page intentionally left blank Contents Preface to Fourth Edition xii Preface to Third Edition xiii Preface to Second Edition xiv Preface to First Edition xv Author’s Acknowledgements xvi Publisher’s Acknowledgements xvii 1 What do sociolinguists study? 1 What is a sociolinguist? 1 Why do we say the same thing in different ways? 2 What are the different ways we say things? 4 Social factors, dimensions and explanations 8 Section I Multilingual Speech Communities 17 2 Language choice in multilingual communities 19 Choosing your variety or code 19 Diglossia 27 Code-switching or code-mixing 34 3 Language maintenance and shift 53 Language shift in different communities 53 Language death and language loss 58 Factors contributing to language shift 60 How can a minority language be maintained? 64 Language revival 67 4 Linguistic varieties and multilingual nations 76 Vernacular languages 77 Standard languages 78 Lingua francas 82 Pidgins and creoles 85 5 National languages and language planning 100 National and official languages 102 Planning for a national official language 107 Developing a standard variety in Norway 111 The linguist’s role in language planning 115 ix Contents Section II Language Variation: Focus on Users 129 6 Regional and social dialects 131 Regional variation 132 Social variation 139 Social dialects 140 7 Gender and age 159 Gender-exclusive speech differences: highly structured communities 159 Gender-preferential speech features: social dialect research 163 Gender and social class 164 Explanations of women’s linguistic behaviour 167 Age-graded features of speech 175 Age and social dialect data 177 Age grading and language change 180 8 Ethnicity and social networks 186 Ethnicity 186 Social networks 196 9 Language change 206 Variation and change 207 How do changes spread? 214 How do we study language change? 219 Reasons for language change 222 Section III Language Variation: Focus on Uses 237 10 Style, context and register 239 Addressee as an influence on style 240 Accommodation theory 245 Context, style and class 250 Style in non-Western societies 258 Register 261 11 Speech functions, politeness and cross-cultural communication 274 The functions of speech 275 Politeness and address forms 284 Linguistic politeness in different cultures 292 12 Gender, politeness and stereotypes 301 Women’s language and confidence 301 Interaction 310 Gossip 316 The linguistic construction of gender 320 The linguistic construction of sexuality 322 Sexist language 324 x Contents 13 Language, cognition and culture 337 Language and perception 338 Whorf 342 Linguistic categories and culture 347 Discourse patterns and culture 352 Language, social class and cognition 355 14 Analysing discourse 363 Pragmatics and politeness theory 364 Ethnography of speaking 372 Interactional sociolinguistics 378 Conversation Analysis (CA) 384 Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) 393 15 Attitudes and applications 409 Attitudes to language 409 Sociolinguistics and education 424 Sociolinguistics and forensic linguistics 429 16 Conclusion 439 Sociolinguistic competence 440 Dimensions of sociolinguistic analysis 446 Sociolinguistic universals 449 References 454 Appendix: phonetic symbols 475 Glossary 477 Index 479 xi Preface to Fourth Edition The fourth edition of my textbook has provided yet another opportunity to respond to some of the valuable suggestions that readers and reviewers have provided over the years. I have added many new examples and exercises, up-dated the references and recommended readings, and added material on koines and koineisation, linguistic landscapes, new Englishes, Multicultural London English, stylisation, language and sexuality, societal approaches to attitudes research, and forensic linguistics. I have also added some further sociolinguistic concepts, and expanded the discussion of material in a number of places. A number of teachers have told me that they fi nd this book useful for teaching sociolin- guistics to students for whom English is an additional language. Since the book was written, inevitably, with an English-speaking audience in mind, I encourage teachers to adapt the exercises to the situations of their students. However, bearing in mind the needs of speakers of English as an additional language, I have tried to keep the language of this book as clear as possible. I hope the new edition proves useful and that the amendments and additions increase the value of the book both for students and teachers. Janet Holmes Wellington, New Zealand February 2012 xii Preface to Third Edition The third edition of my textbook has provided a further opportunity to respond to some of the many valuable suggestions that readers have sent to me over the last ten years. I have added some new examples, up-dated the references and recommended readings once again, and in response to many requests I have added a new chapter on approaches to the analysis of discourse. I have also added some additional sociolinguistic concepts, and expanded the discussion of material in places. This book uses many examples from a range of sources. When no explicit source is provided, the examples are based on my own experience, and especially on corpora of recorded materials that I have accumulated over
Recommended publications
  • 0 Hyman Vita April 2021
    LARRY M. HYMAN Professor of Linguistics & Executive Director, France-Berkeley Fund Department of Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-2650 http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~hyman/ • [email protected] BIRTHDATE PLACE OF BIRTH NATIONALITY September 26, 1947 Los Angeles U.S.A. EDUCATION University of California, Los Angeles B.A. (Linguistics) 1969 University of California, Los Angeles M.A. (Linguistics) 1969 University of California, Los Angeles Ph.D. (Linguistics) 1972 HONORS/AWARDS Honors at Entrance, UCLA, 1965 Kiwanis Club Scholarship, Fall 1965 President’s and University Scholarships, 1965-1968 Honors Program, UCLA, 1966-1969 Education Abroad Program, Bordeaux, France, 1966-1967 N.D.E.A. Title VI Fellowships (to study Igbo, Hausa, Bamileke), 1968-1970 Departmental Scholar, Department of Linguistics, 1968-1969 Phi Beta Kappa, graduated Summa cum Laude, June 1969 UCLA Alumni Award for Distinguished Service in the Humanities, 1972 Cultural Exchange, Affaires Etrangères, France, January 1976 John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, 1977-1978 Albert S. Raubenheimer Distinguished Faculty Award, University of Southern California, 1987 Chancellor’s Professor, UC Berkeley, 1996-1999 Distinguished Service Award, Social Sciences Division, UC Berkeley, 2002 Médaille du Collège de France, January 2004. Elected Fellow, Linguistic Society of America, January 2007 EFL International Chair of Quantitative and Experimental Linguistics, Paris, September-December 2012 President, Linguistic Society of America, 2017 (Vice-President, 2016; Immediate Past President, 2018) Victoria A. Fromkin Lifetime Service Award, Linguistic Society of America, 2021 Chevalier, Ordre des Palmes Académiques, France, 2021 GRANTS/FELLOWSHIPS Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Year Fellowship, Nigeria-Cameroon, 1970-1971, approx. $5000 Postdoctoral Fellowship, Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1973- 1975, approx.
    [Show full text]
  • 3.8 the Phonetics-Phonology Interface
    3.8 THE PHONETICS-PHONOLOGY INTERFACE Silke Hamann, University Düsseldorf 1 Introduction To define the interface of phonetics and phonology, we first have to establish the topics of the two linguistic disciplines that are involved. While phonology deals with abstract, discrete categories encoding language-specific differences in meaning, phonetics is concerned with gradient, continuous, physical representations encoding articulatory and auditory details (see e.g. Pierrehumbert 1990 and Cohn 1993 for detailed discussions). The main question for the phonetics-phonology interface is how these two types of representations can be connected: How do we map discrete, abstract categories onto a phonetic parametric space, and vice versa? This question is often restricted to one direction of processing, namely the production side, where it is known under the name of “phonetic implementation”: How are phonological structures that only exist in our brain converted into something in the real world? Until the mid 1970s, the view prevailed that every phonological category (i.e., every segment, feature, syllable, etc.) has an invariant characteristic in the acoustic signal or in the articulation. This invariant trait was considered to be language- independent. The mapping from abstract phonological material onto the discrete phonetic realization was thus believed to be universal and automatic. The search for these invariant, language-independent phonetic characteristics of phonological categories caused a massive increase in experimental methods, which eventually gave rise to the field of Laboratory Phonology (see chapters 2.2 and 4.1). However, finding invariant traits turned out to be more problematic than anticipated. Early cross-linguistic studies on the acoustics of segments showed already that there are no universal correlates of phonological categories, see e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • An Introduction to Sociolinguistics LEARNING ABOUT LANGUAGE
    An Introduction to Sociolinguistics LEARNING ABOUT LANGUAGE General Editors: Geoffrey Leech & Mick Short, Lancaster University Already published: Analysing Sentences (2nd edition) Noel Burton-Roberts Words and Their Meaning Howard Jackson An Introduction to Phonology Francis Katamba Grammar and Meaning Howard Jackson Realms of Meaning: An Introduction to Semantics Th. R. Hofmann An Introduction to Psycholinguistics Danny D. Steinberg An Introduction to Spoken Interaction Anna-Brita Stenström Watching English Change Laurie Bauer Meaning in Interaction: An Introduction to Pragmatics Jenny Thomas An Introduction to Cognitive Linguistics Friedrich Ungerer and Hans-Jörg Schmid Exploring the Language of Poems, Plays and Prose Mick Short Contemporary Linguistics: An Introduction William O’Grady, Michael Dobrovolsky and Francis Katamba Analysing Sentences Noel Burton-Roberts An Introduction to Natural Language Processing Through Prolog Clive Matthews An Introduction to Child Language Development Susan Foster-Cohen The Sounds of Language: An Introduction to Phonetics Henry Rogers An Introduction to Foreign Language Learning and Teaching Keith Johnson An Introduction to Sociolinguistics (4th edition) Janet Holmes An Introduction to Sociolinguistics Fourth Edition JANET HOLMES First published 1992 by Pearson Education Limited Second edition published 2001 Third edition published 2008 Fourth edition published 2013 Published 2013 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017, USA Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business Copyright © 1992, 2001, 2008, 2013, Taylor & Francis. The right of Janet Holmes to be identified as author of this Work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
    [Show full text]
  • Contemporary Linguistics an Introduction
    Contemporary Linguistics An Introduction Second edition WILLIAM O'GRADY University of Hawaii JOHN ARCHIBALD University of Calgary FRANCIS KATAMBA University of Lancaster Longman is an imprint of Harlow, England • London • New York • Boston • San Francisco • Toronto Sydney • Tokyo • Singapore • Hong Kong • Seoul • Taipei • New Delhi Cape Town • Madrid • Mexico City • Amsterdam • Munich • Paris • Milan Brief Contents Preface xv Acknowledgements xvii Publisher's acknowledgements xix List of Technical Abbreviations xxi 1 Language: A Preview 1 2 Phonetics: The Sounds of Language 16 3 Phonology: The Function and Patterning of Sounds 59 4 Morphology: The Analysis of Word Structure 116 5 Syntax: The Analysis of Sentence Structure 153 6 Semantics and Pragmatics: The Analysis of Meaning 197 7 Cognitive Grammar 243 8 Historical Linguistics: The Study of Language Change 272 9 The Classification of Languages 327 10 First Language Acquisition 357 11 Second Language Acquisition 394 12 Psycholinguistics: The Study of Language Processing 428 13 Brain and Language 455 14 Language in Social Contexts 477 15 Writing and Language 523 16 Animal Communication 547 17 Computational Linguistics 581 Glossary 620 Sources 655 Appendix: phonetic charts 668 Language Index 672 Subject Index 677 VII Preface xv Acknowledgements xvii Publisher's acknowledgements xix List of Technical Abbreviations xxi 1 Language: A Preview 1 William O'Crady 1.1 Specialisation for language 2 1.2 A creative system 3 1.3 Grammar and linguistic competence 5 Summing up 14 Recommended reading
    [Show full text]
  • A Definitive New Textbook in English Language
    IN REQUEST AN SPECTIO TOD N COPY AY! A definitive new textbook in English language JUNE 2009 480pp Paperback 978-1-4039-4590-7 £19.99 Language in Literature: Stylistics; M.Short CONTENTS Literary Practices; D.Barton What is the English New Technologies: Literacies in Cyberspace; U.Papen INTRODUCTION: STUDYING THE PART IV: ENGLISH: COMMUNICATION ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND INTERACTION (ed. R.Wodak) language like? PART I: ENGLISH: STRUCTURE (ed. F.Katamba) Structures of Conversation; G.Myers Phonetics; K.Watson Language, Reality and Power; N.Fairclough Phonology: Segmental; F.Katamba Politeness in Interaction: J.Culpeper Phonology: Beyond Segmental; F.Katamba Gender and Language; J.Sunderland Morphology: Word Structure; F.Katamba Language and Sexuality; P.Baker Grammar: Words (and Phrases); G.Leech Bad Language; T.McEnery Why is it like that? Grammar: Phrases (and Clauses); G.Leech Language and Politics; R.Wodak Grammar: Clauses (and Sentences); G.Leech Business Communication; V.Koller Text Linguistics; P.Chilton PART V: ENGLISH: HISTORY (ed. J.Culpeper) Semantics; A.Siewierska Standard English and Standardisation; P.Kerswill Pragmatics; J.Culpeper & G. Schauer What do we need to know & J. Culpeper PART II: ENGLISH SPEECH: REGIONAL AND Spelling; J.Culpeper & D.Archer SOCIAL VARIATION (ed. P.Kerswill) Phonological Change; F.Katamba & P.Kerswill in order to study it? Regional Variation in English Accents and Dialects; Lexical Change; S.Hoffmann K.Watson Semantic Change; W.Hollmann Language and Social Class; P.Kerswill Grammatical Change; W.Hollmann Language and Ethnicity; A.Khan PART VI: ENGLISH: LEARNING AND TEACHING ‘ This volume proves that it is still possible to make Pidgins and Creoles Englishes; M.Sebba (ed.
    [Show full text]
  • African Linguistics on the Prairie
    African linguistics on the prairie Selected papers from the 45th Annual Conference on African Linguistics Edited by Jason Kandybowicz Travis Major Harold Torrence Philip T. Duncan language Contemporary African Linguistics 3 science press Contemporary African Linguistics Editors: Akinbiyi Akinlabi, Laura J. Downing In this series: 1. Payne, Doris L., Sara Pacchiarotti & Mokaya Bosire (eds.). Diversity in African languages: Selected papers from the 46th Annual Conference on African Linguistics. 2. Persohn, Bastian. The verb in Nyakyusa: A focus on tense, aspect and modality. 3. Kandybowicz, Jason, Travis Major, Harold Torrence & Philip T. Duncan (eds.). African linguistics on the prairie. Selected papers from the 45th Annual Conference on African Linguistics. ISSN: 2511-7726 African linguistics on the prairie Selected papers from the 45th Annual Conference on African Linguistics Edited by Jason Kandybowicz Travis Major Harold Torrence Philip T. Duncan language science press Jason Kandybowicz, Travis Major, Harold Torrence & Philip T. Duncan (ed.). 2018. African linguistics on the prairie: Selected papers from the 45th Annual Conference on African Linguistics (Contemporary African Linguistics 3). Berlin: Language Science Press. This title can be downloaded at: http://langsci-press.org/catalog/book/120 © 2018, the authors Published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Licence (CC BY 4.0): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ISBN: 978-3-96110-036-1 (Digital) 978-3-96110-037-8 (Hardcover) ISSN: 2511-7726 DOI:10.5281/zenodo.1219141
    [Show full text]
  • An Introduction to Psycholinguistics Examines the Psychology of Language As It Relates to Learning, Mind and Brain As Well As to Aspects of Society and Culture
    0582505755_cover 5/10/05 8:00 am Page 1 PSYCHOLINGUISTICS AN INTRODUCTION TO General Editors: Geoffrey Leech and Mick Short An Introduction to Psycholinguistics examines the psychology of language as it relates to learning, mind and brain as well as to aspects of society and culture. How do we learn to speak and to understand speech? Is language unique to humans? Does language influence culture? Using non-technical language, and providing concrete examples, the authors explore: • How children learn to speak and read their native language • Deaf language education • Case studies of wild children and animals and what we can learn from these • Second language acquisition, second language teaching methods, and the problems associated with bilingualism • Language and the brain SECOND • The relationship between thought and language EDITION In this new edition the authors propose a radical new theory of grammar – natural grammar – which unlike other theories can account for both speech comprehension and speech production. Also taking into account the extensive growth in theory, research and practice, this new edition is an accessible and focused introduction to the key issues and the latest research in the field of psycholinguistics. Danny D. Steinberg is Professor Emeritus of Surugadai University and has previously taught at University of Hawaii and Rikkyo University. He is author of a number of books on semantic theory and psycholinguistics, including Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics and Psychology (with L. Jakobovits, 1971) and Psycholinguistics: Language, Mind and World (with H. Nagata and D. Aline, 2nd edition, 2000). Natalia V. Sciarini is an independent researcher, writer and translator, and works at the Research Services and Collections Department at Yale University.
    [Show full text]
  • Francis Katamba English Words.Pdf
    English Words ‘The air is always thick with our verbal emissions. There are so many things we want to tell the world. Some of them are important, some of them are not. But we talk anyway. A life without words would be a horrendous privation.’ (from the Introduction) Words and language, keys to human identity, are fascinating subjects. The aim of this book is to arouse curiosity about English words and about the nature of language in general, especially among students who are not intending to specialise in linguistics. The book covers a wide range of topics, including the structure of words, the meaning of words, how their spelling relates to pronunciation, how new words are manufactured or imported from other languages, and how the meaning of words changes with the passage of time. It also investigates how the mind deals with words by highlighting the amazing intellectual feat performed routinely when the right word is retrieved from the mental dictionary during conversation. Words of all sorts are examined—from great poetry, nonsense verse and journalism to advertising. It is demonstrated that in their very different ways they are all worthy of serious study. This textbook is an accessible descriptive introduction, suitable for students of English language and communication, showing how the nature of words can be illuminated by insights from a broad range of areas of linguistics and related subjects. Francis Katamba is Lecturer in Linguistics at Lancaster University. His publications include Morphology (1993) and Introduction to Phonology (1989). English Words Francis Katamba London and New York First published 1994 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005.
    [Show full text]
  • A Tragedy in Search of a Scandal: a Linguistic Study of Aggressive Journalism in North America After the 2012 U.S
    A Tragedy In Search Of A Scandal: A Linguistic Study Of Aggressive Journalism In North America After The 2012 U.S. Embassy Attack In Benghazi, Libya Tero Virtanen University of Tampere School of Language, Translation and Literary Studies Degree Program in English Language, Literature and Translation Master’s Thesis December 2018 Tampereen yliopisto Viestintätieteiden tiedekunta Englannin kielen ja kirjallisuuden maisteriopinnot VIRTANEN, TERO: A Tragedy In Search Of A Scandal: A Linguistic Study Of Aggressive Journalism In North America After The 2012 U.S. Embassy Attack In Benghazi, Libya Pro gradu -tutkielma, 128 sivua Joulukuu 2018 ________________________________________________________________________________ Tämä pro gradu -tutkielma käsittelee metaforan, synekdokeen, toiseuttamisen, modaalisuuden, nominalisaation ja transitiivisuuden käyttötapoja yhdysvaltalaisten uutislähteiden verkossa julkaistuissa artikkeleissa, jotka käsittelevät Yhdysvaltojen Libyan lähetystöön vuonna 2012 tehtyä hyökkäystä. Tutkielman tavoite on tarjota yleiskatsaus tunnettujen kielellisten keinojen käytöstä uutisotsikoissa ja artikkeleissa sekä selvittää, onko demokraattien ja republikaanien kannattajiksi miellettyjen uutislähteiden konventioissa poliittisen ideologian motivoimia eroja näiden kielellisten keinojen käyttötapojen suhteen. Lisäksi tutkielma pyrkii selvittämään, edustaako pitkään jatkunut Benghazi-uutisointi uuden tyyppistä poliittisen hyökkäyksen muotoa – hyökkäysaihetta (attack topic). Tutkielman metodologinen lähestymistapa koostuu kriittisen
    [Show full text]
  • SOCIOLINGUISTICS MODERN LINGUISTICS SERIES Series Editors
    SOCIOLINGUISTICS MODERN LINGUISTICS SERIES Series Editors Professor Noel Burton-Roberts University ofNewcastle upon Tyne Dr Andrew Spencer University of Essex Each textbook in the Modern Linguistics series is designed to provide an introduction to a topic in contemporary linguistics and allied disciplines, presented in a manner that is accessible and attractive to readers with no previous experience of the topic, but leading them to some understanding of current issues. Noel Burton-Roberts founded the Modern Linguistics series and acted as Series Editor for the first three volumes in the series. Andrew Spencer has since joined Noel Burton-Roberts as joint Series Editor. Titles published in the series English Syntax and Argumentation Bas Aarts Phonology Philip Carr Linguistics and Second Language Acquisition Vivian Cook Sociolinguistics: A Reader Nikolas Coupland and Adam Jaworski Morphology Francis Katamba Contact Languages: Pidgins and Creoles Mark Sebba Further titles are in preparation Sociolinguistics A Reader Edited by Nikolas Coupland and Adam Jaworski Macmillan Education ISBN 978-0-333-61180-7 ISBN 978-1-349-25582-5 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-25582-5 SOCIOLINGUISTICS Editorial matter and selection copyright© 1997 by Nikolas Coupland and Adam Jaworski Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 1997 978-0-333-61179-1 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address: St. Martin's Press, Scholarly and Reference Division, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010 First published in the United States of America in 1997 This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources.
    [Show full text]
  • UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Phonlab Annual Report
    UC Berkeley UC Berkeley PhonLab Annual Report Title Tone: Is it Different? Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1sr5f98x Journal UC Berkeley PhonLab Annual Report, 3(3) ISSN 2768-5047 Author Hyman, Larry M Publication Date 2007 DOI 10.5070/P71sr5f98x eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UC Berkeley Phonology Lab Annual Report (2007) • DRAFT prepared for The Handbook of Phonological Theory, 2nd Ed., Blackwell (John Goldsmith, Jason Riggle & Alan Yu, eds) • Comments welcome Tone: Is it Different? Larry M. Hyman University of California, Berkeley 1. Introduction Except for a brief period in the late 1970s and early 1980s, tone has generally fallen outside the central concerns of theoretical phonology. During that period, the concepts and formalisms of Goldsmith’s (1976a,b) autosegmental approach to tone provided the model to address other aspects of “non-linear phonology” including vowel harmony (Clements 1977, 1981), nasal harmony (Hyman 1982), and feature geometry (Clements 1985, Sagey 1986). In addition, autosegmental approaches to templatic morphology (McCarthy 1981), reduplication (Marantz 1982), and other aspects of “prosodic morphology” owed their inspiration to tone, which through the work of Pulleyblank (1986) provided important insights into the developing framework of lexical phonology and morphology (Kiparsky 1982, 1985; Mohanan 1986). Most generative work prior to and during this period had centered around African tone systems (Leben 1973a, Hyman & Schuh 1974, Goldsmith 1976, Clements & Ford 1979, Clements & Goldsmith’s 1984), two notable exceptions being Haraguchi (1977) and Yip (1980), who dealt with the tonal dialectology of Japanese and Chinese, respectively. Finally, Pierrehumbert (1980) developed an influential autosegmental approach to intonation based on English, which was subsequently applied to Japanese (Beckman & Pierrehumbert 1986) and many other languages since.
    [Show full text]
  • Hyman Vita 7-12
    LARRY M. HYMAN Professor, Department of Linguistics & Executive Director, France-Berkeley Fund University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 [email protected] http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/people/person_detail.php?person=19 BIRTHDATE PLACE OF BIRTH NATIONALITY September 26, 1947 Los Angeles U.S.A. EDUCATION University of California, Los Angeles B.A. (Linguistics) 1969 University of California, Los Angeles M.A. (Linguistics) 1969 University of California, Los Angeles Ph.D. (Linguistics) 1972 HONORS/AWARDS Honors at Entrance, UCLA, 1965 Kiwanis Club Scholarship, Fall 1965 President’s and University Scholarships, 1965-1968 Honors Program, UCLA, 1966-1969 Education Abroad Program, Bordeaux, France, 1966-1967 N.D.E.A. Title VI Fellowships (to study Igbo, Hausa, Bamileke), 1968-1970 Departmental Scholar, Department of Linguistics, 1968-1969 Phi Beta Kappa, graduated Summa cum Laude, June 1969 UCLA Alumni Award for Distinguished Service in the Humanities, 1972 Cultural Exchange, Affaires Etrangères, France, January 1976 John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, 1977-1978 Albert S. Raubenheimer Distinguished Faculty Award, University of Southern California, 1987 Chancellor’s Professor, UC Berkeley, 1996-1999 Distinguished Service Award, Social Sciences Division, UC Berkeley, 2002 Médaille d’Or, Collège de France, January 2004. Elected Fellow, Linguistic Society of America, January 2007 GRANTS/FELLOWSHIPS Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Year Fellowship, Nigeria-Cameroon, 1970-1971, approx. $5000 Postdoctoral Fellowship, Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1973- 1975, approx. $15,000 each year National Science Foundation Travel Grant No. GS41702, Cameroon, June-October 1974, $1500 Social Science Research Council Grant, Cameroon, June-October 1974, $2000 Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research Grant, Cameroon, June-October 1974, $1950 National Science Foundation Grant No.
    [Show full text]