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Exploring the possibilities of standardization and legalization of English and the case of New Englishes What is Standard English? Standard English refers to whatever form of the English language is accepted as a national norm in any English-speaking country. It encompasses grammar, vocabulary, and spelling. Which one do you prefer? I did it. Come quick! The book that I bought Them books I didn’t break anything. I’m first, ain’t I? I done it. Come quickly! The book what I bought Those books I didn’t break nothing. I’m first, aren’t I? Which one do you prefer? I took some money from the ATM. My Dad always votes Democrat. Surfing the Internet Who will the blame fall on? The IRS sent the refund check to my wife and I. ‘Can I speak to Susan?’ ‘This is her.’ This will wet your appetite. I took some money from the ATM machine. My Dad always votes Democratic. Surfing the Web On whom will the blame fall? The IRS sent the refund check to my wife and me. ‘Can I speak to Susan?’ ‘This is she.’ This will whet your appetite. Video – English? British and Irish Standard English BBC English Popular terms for this accent, such as ‘The Queen’s English’, ‘Oxford English’ or ‘Received Pronunciation’ are all a little misleading. Instantly recognizable accent often described as ‘typically British’. It is an accent, not a dialect, since all RP speakers speak Standard English. Regionally non-specific but it does reveal a great deal about their social and/or educational background. BBC English - Features Non-rhoticity Trap-bath The vowels tend to be a bit more conservative than other accents in Southern England, which have undergone significant vowel shifting over the past century. Video – Received Pronunciation Cockney - Features Raised vowel in words Non-rhoticity Trap-bath split London vowel shift Glottal Stopping L-vocalization Th-Fronting Video – Cockney Irish English East Coast Irish English (Dublin) South-Western Irish Accents Northern Irish Accents Australian, New Zealand and South Pacific Standard English Australian Standard English Pronunciation Cultivated Australian Broad Australian General Australian Australian Standard English - lexis Battler: a person who works hard to make a decent living in difficult circumstances. Bludger: person who lives off the efforts of others, a cadger and an idler, a person who expects others to do all the work. Dinkum: work; a fair share of work; reliable, genuine, honest, true New Zealand Standard English Standard New Zealand is broadly the same as Standard British, but some distinctions exist, such as the plural forms "rooves" and "wharves" rather than "roofs" and "wharfs." In spelling, New Zealanders, like Australians, use -ise as in centralise, not ize. In British usage, -ise is common and ize widely used, while in American usage ize is the norm. The kiwi accent has been rated the most attractive and prestigious form of English outside the UK in a BBC survey. New Englishes Spoken in the former colonies of Britain (India, Nigeria, Singapore, etc.) and the US (the Philippines) Learnt as second languages or one language within a wider multilingual repertoire of acquisition New Englishes The four criterias as defined by Platt, Weber and Ho: 1. Developed through the education system. 2. Developed in an area where a native variety of English was not the language spoken by most of the population. 3. It is used for a range of functions among those who speak or write it in the region where it is used. 4. It has become ‘localised’ or ‘nativised’ by adopting some language features of its own. Internal factors According to Bamgbose internal factors determine the status of a neologism: Demographic factor Geographical factor Authoritative factor Codification Acceptability factor Levels of Variation Pronunciation Grammar Vocabulary Video – New Englishes Asian and African Standard English African English It refers to the English spoken in subSaharan Africa. The three distinct strands of English evolved in Africa are 1. West African English 2. East African English 3. South African English South Asia Geographically, the term South Asia is used to refer collectively to India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Maldives. English is the official language. All government documents, military communications, street signs, many shop signs, business contracts and other activities use English. Pronunciation BE(RP) th [t][d] Countries and Territories India, w [v] Sri Lanka, India p, k, t at word initial New E [India, Malaysia Aspirated] Similar to [+ Voiced] [+ Glottal Ghana, Voiced] at stops word final Pronunciation BE(RP) New E [l] vs [r] [l] = [r] [Sh] [s] Countries and Territories Hong Kong, Singapore, East Africa East Africa, Hong Kong [i] vs [i:] [i] = [i:] Singapore, India, Africa schwa [a] Africa Grammar: Nouns Platt et al 1. 2. 3. 4. Lack of plural marking Specific/non-specific system rather than definite/indefinite system Change of quantifier forms Change of word order within noun phrase Grammar: Verbs Platt et al 1. 2. 3. 4. Limited marking of the 3-person singular present tense form Use of an aspect system rather than a tense system Extension of the use of be + verb + ing to stative verbs Different phrasal and prepositional verb constructions Vocabulary New coinages ◦ By adding a prefix or suffix to an existing word ◦ By compounding Borrowings ◦ From indigenous languages Idioms Code switching Criticism for New Englishes They are second languages which do not have ‘a status equal to those varieties of English which are used as primary or first languages’ (Kachru) They display lower standards. They are mastered only by a minority who ‘have a very imperfect command of only a limited portion of the language’. They are ‘reserved for use with specific individuals in a narrowly restricted range of situations’. They show ‘widely shared “aberrancies” ’ ‘Each individual typically adds in his own speech a large and idiosyncratic collection of features reflecting his particular native language, educational background and personal temperament.’ Phonological changes which take place in them can change other parts of the language Canadian English Result of waves of immigration and settlement Influx of loyalists fleeing American Revolution Considered by many linguists to be a variant of North American English Waves of settlement from Britain and Ireland after the war of 1812 In the 1800s more than half a million English speakers travelled to Canada Education became compulsory in England in 1880 so the immigrants’ dialect was uninfluenced by Standard British English Children who grew up speaking English in Canada played a significant role in its birth The languages of Aboriginal peoples in Canada started to influence European languages used in Canada even before widespread settlement took place and the French of Lower Canada provided vocabulary to the English of Upper Canada. Major influences: British, American and French SPELLING American and British variations coexist in Canadian English Our/or: Spellings with –our are preferred. Such as colour and favourite (French influence) Re/er: Spellings with –re are preferred: Such as centre and theatre Doubling final consonants: Such as enroll, install, marvellous, traveller Long forms of last syllable: Such as catalogue, omelette Historical trade relations influence spellings of certain words such as American spelling of “tire” is used because Canadian Automobile industry has been dominated by American firms. On the other hand, British spelling of “cheque” is linked to the important ties with British financial institutions. PHONOLOGY Rhoticity Canadian Raising Pre rhotic vowel substitution Heavy usage of the diphthong which gives a prominent “aa” sound such as Vietnam and Nevada Letter “Z” is normally pronounced zed instead of American “zee” Yod dropping T-flapping and T-deletion Dropping final consonants VOCABULARY and GRAMMAR The great multipurpose “EH” – tag question, backchannel utterance for agreement, asking for repetition Click – kilometer Load words from native languages -Eskimos’ language and NA English Native words borrowed from French Canadianism: words given a new meaning in the canadian context Few grammatical differences Tendency to drop the definite articles Juxtaposing nouns removing possessive form – probably natural evolutionary effect resulting from a desire to simplify language British colonialism Travelling in search of land and discovery Religious links Forced immigration for African slave trade American and British conflict – matter of identity Early Modern English period – English borrowed heavily from regional languages Syntactic changes developed – “gotten” Loan words or words influenced from a multitude of languages including French, Yiddish, Dutch etc Rhotic Preposition frequency differences Ize preferred in American spellings over ise Shorter last suffix preferred such as catalog, program Americanisms Dropping of the “u” in words of British origin er spellings preferred Differences in frequency of usage of grammatical components such as semi modals Verbing Compound words Political argument: social adhesive vs suppression of cultural pluralism "We should not be so naive . . . as to begin thinking that nonstandard English will ever shed its stigma. Many who argue against teaching Standard conventions seem to believe it will. The reality is that failure to teach the conventions of Standard and formal Standard English in our classes is unlikely to have any effect on society's attitudes toward speakers of nonstandard English, but it will most certainly have an effect on our students' lives. Their horizons will be limited, and many at the bottom of the socioeconomic scale will remain ghettoized. On this basis alone, I would argue that we must push students to reach their full potential, especially with regard to language. Our society is growing ever more competitive, not less, and Standard English, because it is inclusive rather than limiting, is a basic requirement for social and economic opportunities." (James D. Williams, The Teacher's Grammar Book, 2nd ed. Routledge, 2005) Economic argument: costs of translation vs threat to freedom and implementation costs Channeling resources towards one language threatens other languages Education issues Teachers incompetent in standard language Countries with high proportion of immigrants Yet most writers who have given serious thought to language are neither kind of iptivist…The thoughtful, nondichotomous position on language depends on a simple insight: Rules of proper usage are tacit conventions. Conventions are unstated agreements within a community to abide by a single way of doing things—not because there is any inherent advantage to the choice, but because there is an advantage to everyone making the same choice. Standardized weights and measures, electrical voltages and cables, computer file formats, the Gregorian calendar, and paper currency are familiar examples. (Steven Pinker) "It is important to understand that identifying a dialect as standard or nonstandard is a sociological judgment, not a linguistic one." (F. Parker and K. Riley, Linguistics for NonLinguists. Allyn and Bacon, 1994)