Folk Speech

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Folk Speech Terms and Examples

description

Folk Speech. Terms and Examples. Key Terms. Dialect -traditional deviation from standard speech: including grammar, pronunciation, and vocabulary. A dialect is understood by its “parent” language. Isogloss -is a geographic boundary used to identify dialectical boundaries. They can overlap. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Folk Speech

Page 1: Folk Speech

Folk Speech

Terms and Examples

Page 2: Folk Speech

Key Terms

Dialect-traditional deviation from standard speech: including grammar, pronunciation, and vocabulary. A dialect is understood by its “parent” language.

Isogloss-is a geographic boundary used to identify dialectical boundaries. They can overlap.

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Morphology-an aspect of grammar that involves the form of a word.

Syntax-an aspect of grammar that involves the order of words in a grammatical structure.

Examples:Non-standard verb use (snew, drowned)Expressions (“I could care less”)Word forms (“-ify” as in “She prettified”)

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Syntactical Variation

Often heard in the speech of nonnative speaker groups.

Includes Word Order Variation as well as non-conventional pronunciation of words.

Examples:

“The off is on” and “Cairo, Illinois”

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Dialectical Vocabulary

Vocabulary varies between and within regions. The different forms of words or entirely different words used for the same purpose is dialectical vocabulary.

Examples:Coke: sodapop, fountain drink, fizzy, pop,

soda.

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Specialized Vocabulary

Sometimes referred as jargon or slang, specialized vocabulary refers to the word choice within specific informal “societies” or within folk groups.

Examples:“86”, “pot” or “grass”, “three-peat”,

“hackers”, “gigs”, “longhair” or “skinhead”

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Folk Naming

Is the practice of “nicknaming” almost anything around us.

Examples:

Hoosier, Tabby, Tom, John Doe, Vatican roulette, saddle blankets, and skid road.