Transcript Slide 1

Topic 4
What is a language?
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Since ancient history, the Chinese language has always
consisted of a wide variety of dialects, hence prestige
dialects and lingua franca have always been needed. In
early 17th century, efforts were made to standardise the
pronunciation, but the success was limited. In early 20th
century, the Beijing dialect was voted for the general
foundation of the new national language. It became the
major source of standard national pronunciation. It is now
the official language of mainland China. However in Hong
Kong, due to historical and linguistic reasons, the language
of education and both formal and informal speech remains
the local Standard Cantonese, but standard Putonghua is
becoming increasingly influential.
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Since ancient history, the Chinese language has always
consisted of a wide variety of dialects, hence prestige
dialects and lingua franca have always been needed. In
early 17th century, efforts were made to standardise the
pronunciation, but the success was limited. In early 20th
century, the Beijing dialect was voted for the general
foundation of the new national language. It became the
major source of standard national pronunciation. It is now
the official language of mainland China. However in Hong
Kong, due to historical and linguistic reasons, the language
of education and both formal and informal speech remains
the local standard Cantonese, but standard Putonghua is
becoming increasingly influential.
Topics
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Language, dialect and accent;
Standard languages &
standardisation;
Official languages;
Vernacular languages;
Lingua francas;
Implications for education.
Languages and dialects
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Cantonese/Shanghainese/Putonghua
Norwegian/Danish
Max Weinreich: “a language is a dialect with an
army and a navy”
Language/dialect distinction is
political/sociological as much as linguistic
E.g. 1
Formal Yugoslavia: Serbo-Croatian
Croatia: Croatian
Yugoslavia: Serbian
E.g. 2
China: langages => dialects
Languages and dialects
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A language is a collection of dialects.
A dialect is a particular variety of a
language that differs noticeably from
the variety or varieties of the same
language spoken by another group
or groups of people.
Dialects and accents
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Dialects are variations in
pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar
Accents are variations in
pronunciation only
A final note on accent. WE ALL HAVE
ONE! There is no such thing as a
person who speaks without an accent.
This is not an exercise in political
correctness, by the way. It is a fact.
A dialect continuum
D1
D2 D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
Standard languages &
standardisation
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Standard language or standard dialect?
Why have a “standard” language?
What leads to standardisation of language
use in a community?
• Prestige,
• Codification
• High functions
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Characteristics of the development of a
standard language
• Accepted written variety (e.g. spelling)
• Development of accepted vocabulary
Standard vs vernacular languages
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Languages evolve to meet communicative need.
Any language can perform any communicative
function;
No language (or dialect or accent) is “superior” to
any other (but all varieties are inappropriate at
times);
Emergence of a standard variety is a historical
accident.
What is standard is dictated by attitudes in the
society towards particular groups of people who
speak in particular ways.
The right view
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Languages have various dialects.
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What is considered standard is associated with prestige, a
non-linguistic factor.
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From a linguistic standpoint, what is considered standard
has nothing to do with correctness or superiority.
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From a linguistic standpoint, all dialects are equally correct,
equally expressive, equally logical and so forth. That is, the
term non-standard dialect means just that, not the
standard dialect. It does not mean inferior or sub-standard.
Standard : unchanging??
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RP ; the Queen’s English; BBC English
English: multiple negation; misuse of
pronouns
E.g. John and me went bowling last Friday night.
Mary gave the books to John and I.
Words have disappeared in Standard
Mandarin
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What is standard is not a matter of
“better’ from a linguistic point of view.
What is standard is dictated by
attitudes in the society towards
particular groups of people who
speak in particular ways.
National and official languages
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The Affective-referential dimension/
The ideological-instrumental
dimension
A national language is the language
of a political, cultural and social unit.
An official language is a language for
government business.
Establishing an official national language in
Mainland China
17th century
 Orthoepy Academies (Zhengyin Shuyuan): to
make pronunciation conform to the Beijing
standard
1913
 Commission on the Unification of pronunciation:
Beijing dialect became the major source of
standard national pronunciation. It was voted for
the general foundation of the new national
language `guoyu” (national speech). It is also the
official language of Mainland China
1955
 standard mandarin was renamed
putonghua or “common speech”. It
became the medium of instruction in
all schools nationwide.
Official languages
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201 living languages listed for China.
1 National or official language:
Mandarin Chinese. 1,262,358,000
(UN, 1998).
55 official minority nationalities; total
91,200,314 or 6.5% of the
population (1990).
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www.ethnologue.com
Other official languages
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Hong Kong: Chinese, English
UK: ??
US: ??
UN: ??
Official vs. national languages
Vernacular languages
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”.
Typically NOT standardised;
Typically used at home;
Typically functionally restricted (Low
functions): the home, friends, sometimes
initial literacy;
Typically the first language someone
learns;
Typically contrasted with an official or
High language in that society;
Lingua francas
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Used for pragmatic reasons, e.g.
trade;
May be an official or vernacular
language of some speakers;
May become an official or national
language, e.g. Swahili;
Putonghua as a lingua franca?
Implications for education
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The Basic Law has very little to say
about language policy (Yau, 1992),
but what it does say retains
ambiguity: “In addition to Chinese
language, the English language may
also be used…”
Implications for education
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What language varieties should we teach?
Valuing minority varieties
Teaching standardised/official varieties
Language is a highly political issue. Great care
is needed, based on understanding, when
discussing language in society
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E.g.
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/JWCRA
WFORD/home.htm
Implications for education
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Cantonese should not treated or regarded as an
obstruction in the pathway of PTH;
School children should be taught that in the
process of learning PTH they need not give up or
forget their home dialects and languages;
Teachers should emphasize to their students that
knowing two or more varieties of Chinese (and
other languages) is an invaluable asset that will
pay dividends throughout the speaker’s life.
Terminology:
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Dialect, accent;
Standard language, official language,
national language;
Vernacular;
Lingua franca.
Note how the same word can have different – but
related – meanings. You need to be careful of
your own use of words.