Chapter 6, Language Variation: Online material

For Students

  1. Summary

In this chapter we present an overview of the development of research on regional dialects, including methodologies used to create dialect maps and study the patterns in local vernaculars. We also introduce the concept of the linguistic variable, which is central to linguistics and variationist sociolinguistics in particular. We review some early important work on regional varieties of English by well-known sociolinguists who were responsible for the growth of the field. Further, we look at social dialects and how they are studied, focusing in particular on social class, and what methodologies have traditionally been used to study this variation.

  1. Review
  2. Compare and contrastthe following pairs of terms/concepts:

social variation/regional variation

isogloss/dialect boundary

social class/social network

variable/variant

random sample/judgment sample

apparent time/real time

independent variable/dependent variable

2.2.Review questions

2.2.1.What were some of the problems identified with earlier methods used in regional dialectology studies?

2.2.2. How do you determine the variants of a variable? (Give an example.)

2.2.3. What are some of the issues in determining social class membership? Why do some researchers choose to not categorize people in this way, but instead look at social networks?

2.2.4.What is the observer’s paradox, when is it relevant, and how do researchers seek to work around it?

2.2.5. Variationist sociolinguistics is often said to be primarily quantitative and correlational: explain what this means.

  1. Terms to know from this chapter

diachronic (or historical) linguistics

dialect geography

dialect atlas

isogloss

dialect boundary

focal area

relic area

remnant area

transition area

sample

the axiom of categoricity

dialect mixture

free variation

linguistic variable

variants

principle of accountability

indicator

marker

stereotype

social class

observer’s paradox

minimum pairs

random sample

judgment (or quota) sample

stratified sample

apparent time

real time

panel study

trend study

dependent variable

independent variable

quantitative (variationist) sociolinguistics

validity

reliability

  1. Links

Linguistic Atlas Projects in the United States:provides information about a wealth of dialect projects that have been carried out in the United States, including maps and some publicly available data.

Accents and Dialects of the United Kingdom: provides an overview of the dialects of the United Kingdom, with examples from three: Received Pronunciation, Geordie, and Minority Ethnic English.

BBC study –seven social classes in United Kingdom: reports on a study which discussed an updated view of how people can be put into social classes in the United Kingdom based on (economic) capital and social capital.