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  1. Chapter 10: Language Variation. Get a hint. Internal Variation. Click the card to flip 👆. Refers to the fact that within a single language, there are different ways of expressing the same meaning. No two speakers of a language speak exactly the same way; nor does any individual speaker speak the same way all the time.

  2. The limits imposed by the documents available for study of past history bring up the all-important question: what are the patterns of variability that covary with 'register' - that is, with discourse patterns used for various functions of language (cf. Ellis & Ure 1967; Ferguson 1959), whether baby-talk, the language of buying and selling, the ...

  3. These patterns have been found over and over again in so many studies that Labov (2001) codified them as principles of linguistic change. (There is one, pretty big, caveat here though: the vast majority of the studies where the pattern has been found represent languages embedded in Euro-American culture!)

  4. Mar 18, 2024 · An idiolect represents the distinctive speech patterns, vocabulary, and grammatical preferences unique to an individual, shaped by personal experiences, education, and social interactions. It is essentially a personal dialect. Whereas a dialect encompasses the linguistic characteristics common to a specific group of people, often defined by ...

  5. language, is indeed the use of language in communication. Even if it were not, I think it would remain an important question whether the general theory of communication—the theory of language-use—can operate with the notion of an idiolect or instead needs the notion of a common language. The second claim—that successful communication

  6. Mar 25, 2016 · An idiolect is not the language of idiots, but an idiosyncratic form of language that is unique to an individual. No two individuals—not even family members living under the same roof—speak ...

  7. An idiolect is the language of one individual. A description of one person’s idiolect includes all the vocabulary and grammatical features of that individual’s personal way of speaking (or writing). Their idiolect is an independent, self-contained system. So Bob’s use of “I don’t know nothing” is simply a feature of Bob’s idiolect.

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