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Features of A.E
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Quick Quiz: On Unit 4 thus far:
1. What are the three accents? 2. Is Australia a ‘classless’ society? 3. Name 3 values of ‘Australian society’ 4. What does pluricentric mean? How does it relate to AE? 5. What is the difference between a dialect and a language?
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Before we start: - BUZZWORDS THAT SOUND GOOD IN ESSAYS:
Social Stratification: social stratification n1. (Sociology) sociol the hierarchical structures of class and status in any society definition-theories-examples.html
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Grammar - The most notable grammatical features come from non standard forms - Would be more prevalent in rural areas - A lot wouldn’t deviate from the standard that much FEATURES IN AUS ENG: You in plural second person pronoun form- youse guys (Not distinct to AuS ENG - Gender marking in both animate and inanimate nouns ‘I got to work in her’ - Whom- declining in use-
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Grammatical features:
You in plural second person pronoun form- youse guys (Not distinct to AuS ENG) - Gender marking in both animate and inanimate nouns ‘I got to work in her’ - Whom- declining in use- - Non standard pronoun forms ‘one of them things’ ‘me and her’ - Mixing of there and their -Use of present continuous instead of simple present ‘I am liking school’ - Double marked superlatives ‘My most happiest day’ ‘the very bestest of friends’ - Have omission- instead of ‘I have only drunk half of it’ ‘I only drunk half of it’ - Use of of instead of have after modal verbs, should, could and would - Can, used instead of may, can I? instead of may I?
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Grammatical features Was for all past tense forms of to be- ‘you was here on Saturday’ ‘I’m sure they was there’ Use of don’t in place where doesn’t would be Standard- he don't always know about that’, instead of he doesn’t always know about that’ Aint as an all purpose negative- instead of isn’t or haven’t’ Common use of double negative ‘I didn’t do nothing’ I would of waited
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Lexical Features - Borrowing: when a word is borrowed from a donor language and incorporated into a recipient language without translation. - We have incorporated little from Aboriginal languages however they are still present and still colour our languages. Yakka- Hard Work Billagbong Boomerang Gaalah Places- Geelong, Ballarat, Echucha (One third of Aus places have origins in Aboriginal languages) USE SHEET PROVIDED
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Regionalisms Many 18th and 19th century British regionalisms thrived in Aus and are now considered ‘Australian’ Billy- Is actually from Scotland- Fain Dinkim- From Derbyshire Cobber- From Suffolk Bloody Turn to page 198 and copy down 3 of the examples in the table- Can you think of any others?
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Values - Some of these have insight into Aussie values- Central to Aus culture Battler, fair go etc A lot of these are used only colloquially- You wouldn’t find them often in writing or formal settings - Things bonzer and shelia not overly common.
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Morphological features
DIMINUTIVES Where words are shortened to one syllable with an additional ending- usually y/ie or o. Let’s watch the telly Shrimp on barbie Jonno loves footy footy-and-arvo/
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Diminutives It is claimed by linguist Anna Wierbicka that this reflects “cultural values like the cult of informality, mateship, egalitarianism and friendliness” Words like muso convey a laid back friendlessness and casual togetherness. Whilst a lot of old aussie slang is lessoning- diminutives show no sign of lessening
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Quickly- Write as many as you can think of..
Journo, Compo, surfie, ….
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Watching the ‘call me maybe’ Parody-
Write down anything you can find in terms of Australian Lexical items, grammar or morphological patterning. And I’m sorry.
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RESEARCH: Does the cultural cringe still exists? What makes you say that? (500 words)
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