Volume, Pitch, Intonation, Stress, Tempo
What are prosodic features?
Reducing the length of a word - probs, bro
Joins words, phrases or clauses. There are two types -co-ordinating and subordinating
What is a conjunction?
The practice of alternating between two or more languages or dialects in conversation
What is code-switching?
The study of the origin of words
What is etymology?
Describes how informal or formal a text is.
What is the register?
Leaving out sounds - 'av for have
What is elision?
A person, place, thing, idea
What is a noun?
A sentence that requests or commands. Most often starts with the verb and omits the subject..
What is an imperative?
Facial expressions, body gestures, body language, eye gaze
What are paralinguistic features?
A group of words that belong to the same category.
What is a semantic field or domain?
Spoken, written or signed communication
What is the mode?
The vowel sound lessens - schwa
What is vowel reduction?
What is an adverb?
Simple, compound, complex, compound-complex, fragment
What is a sentence structure?
Holding, passing, taking the floor
What is turn-taking?
When a word's meaning changes over time to mean something different
What is shift?
The main reason a communication exists
What is function?
A sound is changed to become more similar to a neighbouring vowel.
What is assimilation?
Proper nouns becoming common nouns - google, bandaid, esky
What is commonisation?
What is an ellipses?
FLICCC
What is coherence?
When a word's meaning changes over time to encompass more meanings.
What is broadening?
A common language
What is Lingua franca?
Sounds are added in connected speech
What is insertion?
The habitual juxtaposition of a particular word with another word or words with a frequency greater than chance. E.g. strong tea, not *powerful tea.
What is collocation?
An additional piece of information about the verb - IN THE MORNING, the teacher came to school
What is an adverbial?
laughter, whispers...
What are vocal effects?
Usually a child uses one word to name many things that may have something in common.
What is semantic over-generalisation?
English is descended from this hypothetical language
What is the Indo-European language family?
What is a schwa
A morphological change where we add affixation, but it doesn't change the essential meaning of the root word.
What is inflection?
Subject, Verb, Object (SVO)
What is word order?
pauses, filled pauses/voiced hesitations, false starts, repetition, repairs...
What are non-fluency features?
Reading between the lines (HINT: the use of ellipses requires us to make an...)
What is inference?
Norfuk, Roper River, Butler English
What are types of Creoles?