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Silva, Clare M.; Zwicky, Arnold M. – 1973
The distinction between formal and casual English as reflected in the lexicon, in phonology, and in syntax is studied. Formality is treated as separate from other categorizations of language such as geographical origin of the speaker, social class of the participants, or specific context of discourse. The study was restricted mainly to the use of…
Descriptors: Classification, Descriptive Linguistics, English, Language Styles
Marckwardt, Albert H. – 1971
The basic scope of this document is a study of the emergence of a linguistic standard for England. It is stated that this was essentially an unconscious process, a recognition of an existing social situation, which took place during the 15th century. A differentiation is made between speech characterized as standard and that characterized as…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Comparative Analysis, Concept Formation, Dialects
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DuBois, Barbara R. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1984
A college English teacher laments her students' incorrect use of common expresssions. (RBW)
Descriptors: Definitions, English, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Smith, Herb – English Quarterly, 1984
A survey of university faculty responses to questionable usage by their students reveals a wide variation in expectations with regard to usage among the group. Suggests the need to devise strategies that take into account the wide gap between the ideal of proper grammar and the reality of an infinity of standards. (RBW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Research, English, Grammar
Pritchard, Constance J. – 1978
Prison language, primarily the lexicon, at the Women's Correctional Center (WCC) in Columbia, South Carolina is described. This center is considered here as a speech community and a subculture. Inmates have developed speech habits and vocabulary which indicate the social structure of the prison and inmate values. They coin or metaphorically extend…
Descriptors: English, Expressive Language, Language Research, Language Usage
Chan, R. S. K. – 1976
Formality as a style may be defined as language which reflects or "keynotes" the degree of familiarity between participants in a discourse. Working from this assumption, this paper attempts to answer the question, "How is formality best described?" Results of a series of tests indicate that informants' labels (with the…
Descriptors: English, Language Classification, Language Patterns, Language Research
Marckwardt, Albert H.; Quirk, Randolph – 1964
This transcription of radio conversations on the English language between Albert H. Marckwardt and Randolph Quirk, jointly produced by The British Broadcasting Corporation and The Voice of America, indicates that American and British English have never been so different as people have imagined and that the dominant tendency has been toward…
Descriptors: Cultural Exchange, Cultural Influences, Diachronic Linguistics, Dialects