Results 151 to 160 of about 1,467,546 (203)
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Language Attitudes

2017
Language attitudes are evaluative reactions to different language varieties. They reflect, at least in part, two sequential cognitive processes: social categorization and stereotyping. First, listeners use linguistic cues (e.g., accent) to infer speakers’ social group membership(s).
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Language attitudes and sociolinguistic behaviour: Exploring attitude‐behaviour relations in language

Journal of Sociolinguistics, 2000
This paper is concerned with the relationship between attitude and behaviour in language. Adolescent male and female subjects were recorded and index‐scores of their linguistic behaviour compared to their assessment of ingroup members in a verbal‐guise attitude experiment, and to their attitudes concerning language usage in a questionnaire.
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Attitudes to language

Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2012
Attitudes to language, by Peter Garrett, Cambridge and New York, Cambridge University Press, 2010, x + 257 pp., £64.00/$99.00 (hardback), ISBN 978-0-521-76604-3; £23.99/$39.99 (paperback), ISBN 978...
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Language ideologies and language attitudes

2013
In the early 1990s, linguistic anthropological work seeking to integrate speakers’ perceptions and understandings of their linguistic and social contexts into analyses of language use coalesced around the theoretical paradigm of language ideology.
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Language attitudes

2018
Joseph C. Hill   +2 more
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Language attitudes

2001
Sarah Burns   +2 more
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Investigating Language Attitude

1999
Abstract The passage can tell us a number of things about the linguistic environment of Hardy’s novel. First, and most obviously, it tells us that the verb to bide and the verbal form you be are nonstandard English; it shows us that they are stigmatized as such (and that there is, therefore, a notion of correctness in the linguistic ...
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Toward a Century of Language Attitudes Research: Looking Back and Moving Forward

Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 2021
Marko Dragojevic   +2 more
exaly  

Language Attitudes and Language Change

Abstract This chapter introduces the study of language attitudes in sociolinguistics (the so-called evaluation problem) and looks at how speech variation is perceived and can trigger attitudes in listeners. The chapter focuses on phonetic variation and the use of methods from social psychology to study how variation is indexically linked
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