- Varieties of English
- VARIATION: Natural phenomenon
- Language is a form of social behavior and communities
tend to split up into groups, each displaying differences of behavior
- Language manifests differences of behavior
- Language is the variety of speakers
- Speakers vary in their vocabulary and skills to use it
- Linguistic variables have both social and style
variation, some only social, but none style variation only
2.
Individuals differ in the manner in
which they speak their native tongue, although usually not markedly within a
small area. The differences among groups of speakers in the same speech
community can, however, be considerable. These variations of a language
constitute its dialects. All languages are continuously changing, but if there
is a common direction of change it has never been convincingly described.
Various factors, especially the use of written language, have led to the
development of a standard language in most of the major speech communities—a
special official dialect of a language that is theoretically maintained
unchanged.
3.
This official dialect is the school
form of a language, and by a familiar fallacy has been considered the norm from
which everyday language deviates. Rather, the standard language is actually a development
of some local dialect that has been accorded prestige. The standard English of
England is derived from London English and the standard Italian is that of
Tuscany. Use of the standard language is often a mark of polite behavior. In
the United States employing standard English, which largely entails the usage
of approved grammar and pronunciation, marks a person as cultivated. Ordinary
speech may be affected by the standard language. Thus, many forms of expression
come to be considered ungrammatical and substandard and are regarded as badges
of ignorance, such as you was
in place of the standard you were.
4.
As in other fields of etiquette,
there is variation. Gotten is
acceptable in the United States but not in England. The literary standard may
differ from the colloquial standard of educated people, and the jargon of a
trade may be unintelligible to outsiders. Such linguistic variations in English
are mainly a matter of vocabulary. An auxiliary language is a nonnative
language adopted for specific use; such languages include lingua franca,
pidgin,
and international
language.
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