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THE GEOGRAPHY OF LANGUAGE Geography 105, Week 6
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What do you call it?
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The Geography of Language Basic Components of Language Dialects, Accent, Linguae Francae, Pidgins, & Creoles Language Families Geography of English Language Isolation and Language Extinction Toponymy Language Conflict
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What is language? A mutually agreed upon system of symbolic communication using sounds, gestures, marks, and signs Offers the means of transmitting belief systems, customs, and skills from generation to generation Different culture have distinctive languages or dialects
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Spatial Nature of Language Languages are regional—different regions have different languages, words, or dialects that serve their own needs If a monolingual speaker cannot understand, considered to be distinct language Dialects are variations of a distinct language that can still be understood
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Dialects of English Some English Dialects Some English Dialects Over 100 dialects of English 30-40 in the British Isles alone
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Dialect Vs. Accent Accent—the way a group or person sounds Pronunciation and musicality of speech Roof, root, creek, bag Dialect—accent plus grammar in speech Includes word choice PNW: rad, bro, bucket vs. pail What words are unique to the PNW?
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Dialect Map of the U.S.
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Dialects, cont. Idiom—from Greek idios, meaning own’s own Figurative meaning different from its literal meaning E.g.: Cut a rug Meaning: to dance well E.g.: Look a gift horse in the mouth Meaning: Don’t be critical of a gift Patois—rural or provincial speech Vernacular—local use/form of language
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Lingua franca Lingua franca—an existing and well established language used widely that is often not the mother tongue E.g.: Swahili serves as the lingua franca in Eastern Africa Pidgin—a composite language consisting of a small vocabulary borrowed from the linguistic groups involved in international commerce E.g.: New Guinea use of Tok Pisin
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Pidgin and Creole Tok Pisin Use of common coopted vocabulary for business at the basic level Gut bai Tenkyu Haumas Creole—language derived from pidgin that has acquired full vocabulary and becomes the native language of the speakers
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Louisiana Creole and Zydeco Clifton Chenier
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Language Families Language family—collection of languages with a common ancestor 6,800 languages grouped into 120 language families
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Language Family Tree
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Language Family Map
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Major Languages Mandarin—885 million speakers Sino-Tibetan family—China, Taiwan, Singapore Hindi/Urdu—426 million speakers Indo-European—Northern India, Pakistan Spanish—358 million speakers Indo-European—Spain, Latin America English—343 million speakers Indo European—British Isles, South Africa, Australia Arabic—235 million speakers Afro-Asiatic—Middle East, North Africa
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Major Languages, cont. Bengali—207 million speakers Indo-European—Bangladesh, India Portuguese—176 millions speakers Indo-European—Portugal, Brazil, southern Africa Russian—167 million speakers Indo-European—Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine Japanese—125 million speakers Japanese and Korean—Japan German—100 million speakers Indo European—Germany, Austria, Switzerland
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Geography of ‘English’ Standard English known as “Received Pronunciation” The pronunciation of educated British speakers in London Split of American English 500 years ago Begins with regional dialects and pidgins Distinct varieties in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India, etc.
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English Today
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Dialect Regions of the U.S.
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Language Isolation & Extinction Languages change over time and space How do language change? Language divergence When one language splits into many Latin becomes French, Spanish, Romanian Language Convergence When two languages merge into one Maltese Language
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Language Isolation and Extinction How do languages change, continued Language Isolate A language that belongs to no family Yuni in the southwestern U.S.; Haida in Alaska Language Extinction The death of a language 300 languages have died since 1500 CE Siuslaw, Tilamook
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Endangered Languages of the World
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The Study of Place Names Toponymy—the study of place names What can a place reflect? Physical features—Shellrock Mountain A function of something historical—Dog River Current or past cultures in the area—Tillamook Ideas such as patriotism—Independence
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Top Ten Place Names in U.S. Clinton Franklin Madison Washington Chester Marion Greenville Springfield Georgetown Salem
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Unusual Place Names
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Language Conflict Conflict of language and place names is common Macedonia’s name angered Greece
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Language Conflict Arabian Gulf or Persian Gulf
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Conflict at Home Cesar Chavez Boulevard? MLK? What about the new bridge?
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Navajo Code Talkers Consider the Navajo Code Talkers role in WWII; are there cultural conflicts that come to mind between the Navajo Volunteers and other troops? What are some historical and practical reasons that the code talkers were used?
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