Results 161 to 170 of about 13,301 (216)
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Diglossia

Word, 1959
Abstract In many speech communities two or more varieties of the same language are used by some speakers under different conditions. Perhaps the most familiar example is the standard language and regional dialect as used, say, in Italian or Persian, where many speakers speak their local dialect at home or among family or friends of the ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Bilingualism With and Without Diglossia; Diglossia With and Without Bilingualism

Journal of Social Issues, 1967
UNTIL THE 1950s THE psychological literature on bilingualism was so much more extensive than its sociological counterpart that workers in the former field have often failed to establish contact with those in the latter. Since the 1960s a very respectable sociological (or sociologically oriented) literature has developed dealing with bilingual societies.
exaly   +2 more sources

Diglossia

Proceedings of the 2013 ACM SIGSAC conference on Computer & communications security - CCS '13, 2013
Code injection attacks continue to plague applications that incorporate user input into executable programs. For example, SQL injection vulnerabilities rank fourth among all bugs reported in CVE, yet all previously proposed methods for detecting SQL injection attacks suffer from false positives and false negatives.This paper describes the design and ...
Sooel Son   +2 more
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Diglossia

1993
Today, the notion of 'diglossia' occupies a prominent place in sociolinguistic research. Since the 1960s, when the dominant sense of 'diglossia' was the complementary sociofunctional distribution of two varieties of the same language, the term has been applied — often controversially — to a growing number of diverse sociolinguistic situations.
Mauro Fernández, William F. Mackey
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Diglossia

2016
Abstract The main goal of this chapter is to survey some of the principal issues relevant to diglossic language situations in Romance, providing a critical review of some of the principal diglossic situations found in the many bi- and multilingual parts of the Romània; the relevance and application to the Romance situation of ...
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Destabilizing Arabic diglossia?

2019
Abstract This paper problematizes current understandings of Arabic diglossia by demonstrating the ways in which it is clearly being reconfigured thanks to the linguistic practices of younger users of the language in the New Media. Analysis of social media data from two undergraduate students, native users of Arabic, illustrates the ways in which such ...
Abdulrahman Alkhamees   +2 more
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Sinhala Diglossia Revisited, or Diglossia Dies Hard

1998
Abstract In 1959, Charles A. Ferguson published an important paper called “Diglossia,” in which he defined diglossia as: a relatively stable language situation in which, in addition to the primary dialects of a language (which may include a standard or regional standards) there is a very divergent, highly codified, (often ...
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Diglossia and Power

2003
This book is about the struggle for social power in the interethnic context of the Austrian part of the 19th Austro-Hungarian Empire. It explores how the struggle for power is reflected in attempts to control language use at different levels of discursive interaction, and how, in a context of intricate and multiple language contact, language became a ...
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Sinhalese Diglossia

1998
Abstract Sinhalese, as used in Ceylon, exhibits the kind of distinction between major functional varieties for which Ferguson’s term DIGLOSSIA has been generally accepted. This chapter is an attempt to characterize those varieties on a broad scale and to point out those characteristics that seem to be most central to them.
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Diglossia: A bibliographic review

Language in Society, 1992
ABSTRACTThe bibliography following the body of this paper contains a total of 1,092 entries on the subject of diglossia. Entries dealing with diglossia in the classical sense of Ferguson (1959) and in the sense of functional compartmentalization of distinct languages are represented approximately equally.
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