Australian Englishes
Sociolects and Idiolects
Sociolect and Idiolects (mostly)
Language and Prestige
Unit 3 Bonus!
100

These are the three types of Australian Englishes.

What are SAE, AAE, and migrant ethnolects? (any order)

100

This sociolect has lead to the advancement of pronouns like “they” being preferred over “he”/”she”.

What changes have been brought by the gender sociolect?

100

This sociolect is influenced by the changes in technology.

What can the age sociolect be influenced by?

100

This describes the expected way of using language.

What are norms?

100

This is one example of lexical patterning.

What is simple / complex repetition? (any one of these)

200

These are the types of Australian accents in order of perceived as least trustworthy to most trustworthy.

What are the terms cultivated, general, and broad.

200

This sociolect contains language which reflects the desire to do something.

What type of language does the aspirations sociolect contain?

200

SAE is a part of this sociolect.

What variety of language is associated with education sociolect?

200

This is prestige.

What is the term applied to the high status given to a certain way of speaking.

200

These are the three examples of syntactic patterning.

What are parallelism, antithesis, and listing? (any order)

300

These are terms used to describe Aboriginal Australian Englishes.

What are light and heavy varieties?

300

This sociolect can cause people’s formality to vary.

How does the occupation sociolect affect formality?

300

WILDCARD !!!
tell me any memorised quote word for word + source 
(i will check)

😛

300

These types of norms/prestige are associated with prescriptivist attitudes.

What are overt norms/prestige?

300

These are four examples of semantic patterning.

What are figurative language / metaphor / simile / oxymoron / hyperbole / puns / irony? (any four of these)

400

Hypocoristic use of suffixes are used for this purpose.

What can be used to reduce formality / create friendly tenor / show Australian laid-back values? (any one of these)

400

Jargon is a common feature of these two sociolects.

What is a common feature of both occupation and interests?

400

These are two factors affecting idiolects.

What are personal experiences / background / context / group membership? (any two of these)

400

Overt norms/prestige are used for this purpose.

What type of norms/prestige are associated with creating social belonging.

400

These are the five examples of phonological patterning.

What are alliteration / assonance / consonance / onomatopoeia / rhythm and rhyme? (any order)

500

Australian English can be used for these two intents.

What can be used to maintain and express cultural identity / facilitate communication / foster a sense of community / promote bilingualism and multilingualism / contribute to the diversity and evolution of language / facilitate cultural exchange / preserve and maintain heritage languages / contribute to the linguistic richness of Australia (any two of these)

500

The sexuality sociolect has this marker.

Which sociolect do specific phrases / prosodic features / shared knowledge fall under? (any one of these)

500

These are five perceptions of the Australian national identity.

What are anti-authoritarianism / anti-intellectualism / connection to land / connection to country / democratic values / egalitarianism / laid-back attitudes / mateship / multiculturalism? (any five of these)

500

Code swtiching achieves covert prestige like this.

What can be used to reinforce shared cultural background / convey emotions / reinforce sense of belonging / be an act of resistence / foster a sense of empowerment? (any one of these)

500

These are seven examples of morphological patterning.

What are neologism / archaism / abbreviation / acronym / initialism / shortening / blending / compounding / contraction / conversion / affixation / backformation / collocation / borrowing / commonization / reduplication? (any seven of these)