Language change
Child language acquisition
Language and the self
English in the world
Surprise
100

In which century was the Great Vowel Shift?

15th-16th century 

100

Which theorist suggested children learn language through imitation and reinforcement?

B.F Skinner 

100

Who developed Accommodation Theory?

Howard Giles.

100

Who coined the term World Englishes?

Braj Kachru.

100

What is code-switching?

Shifting between two or more languages or dialects in conversation.

200

What impact did the printing press have on language change? 

It helped standardise spelling and grammar, spread literacy, and fixed certain forms of English.

200

What is overgeneralisation in CLA?

Applying a grammatical rule too widely (e.g., “mouses” instead of “mice”).

200

What does instrumental power mean?

Power enforced through authority or status (e.g., law, teacher authority).

200

What is the difference between English as a lingua franca and English as a native language?

Lingua franca = common means of communication between non-native speakers; native language = first acquired language in Inner Circle contexts.

200

How does context influence the formality of language?

Audience, purpose, setting affect word choice, grammar, and tone.

300

What does “etymology” mean?

The study of word origins.

300

How does Bruner’s theory of the LASS differ from Chomsky’s LAD?

Bruner emphasised caregiver support and social interaction (LASS), while Chomsky focused on innate grammatical ability (LAD).


300

Explain the difference between positive and negative face.

Positive face = the need to be liked and approved of; negative face = the need for independence and freedom from imposition.

300

How does Schneider’s Dynamic Model improve on Kachru’s three circles?

It shows stages of variety development (foundation, stabilisation, nativisation, stabilisation, differentiation) rather than just static categories.

300

Explain how gender might influence language use.

Differences in politeness, hedging, interruptions, or topic choice (socially constructed patterns).

400

How might the rise of digital English challenge the idea of a single “standard” English?

Online discourse creates new norms (emoji grammar, multimodal texts) that coexist with Standard English, making “the standard” just one option among many.

400

To what extent does Vygotsky’s social interactionist model account for caregiver language patterns?

It explains scaffolding and child-directed speech, but some cross-cultural evidence shows children acquire language without extensive CDS.

400

Why might Goffman’s face theory be seen as universalist, and how is this problematic?

It assumes all cultures value “face” in the same way, but politeness and self-presentation vary cross-culturally.


400

How might Phillipson’s view of English as “linguistic imperialism” be criticised?

It overemphasises power imbalance and neglects how communities choose English for economic/cultural advantage.

500

To what extent is the notion of “language decay” a projection of prescriptive ideology rather than an objective description of change?

“Decay” is largely prescriptivist rhetoric. Historical fears (slang, printing, Americanisms, texting) never destroyed English — they enriched vocabulary and flexibility. Descriptivists (Crystal) argue “progress” and “decay” are moral judgements, not linguistic facts.

500

In what ways does Piaget’s theory underestimate children’s language abilities?

Some children acquire language structures before they fully grasp cognitive concepts, showing cognition and language don’t always align.


500

Can politeness theory fully explain online interactions?

Not fully — online anonymity often reduces politeness, and new forms (emojis, multimodal cues) complicate positive/negative face.

500

How does Crystal’s idea of English as a “global language” differ from Phillipson’s critique?

Crystal = English spreads due to practicality and neutrality; Phillipson = English spreads due to neo-colonial dominance.