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5504229
Language and Technology
Description
Mind-map of Language and Technology for A-Level English Language
No tags specified
english language
language and technology
as-level
a-level
technology
english language
a - level
Mind Map by
Eleanor H
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Eleanor H
over 8 years ago
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Resource summary
Language and Technology
Annotations:
Refer to: http://www.thestudentroom.co.uk/wiki/Language_and_technology_revision_notes
Texting
Linguistic Compression
Vowel Deletion
Phonetic Spelling
Initialism
Letter/Number Homophones
texts used to be restricted to 160 characters with 10p charge
Expressive Punctuation
could now be replaced with emojis
Ellipsis
like spoken language
spontaneous
Predictive Text and Auto-Correct
tolerates non-standard but not random grammar, spelling etc
Emails
often like letters
conventional format
To/From
Subject Line
CC/BCC
can be addressed to more than one person, affecting register
Date/Time Sent
would not have in a letter
Salutation
Sign-Off
may not be followed for more informal situation
often no signature
Formal and Informal
Phone Calls and Voicemails
Canonical Openings
Summons/Answer
Identification/Recognition
now we have Caller ID
Greeting Sequence
"How-Are-You" Sequences
by Schegloff
Closing Sequences
Metatalk
e.g. "We've been nattering on like a pair of old women, haven't we?"
Phatic Speech Acts
e.g. "It's been lovely speaking to you."
Discourse Markers
Postive/Negative Politeness
Valedictions
e.g. "bye", "see you later"
Phone Calls - Dialogic Voicemails - Monologic
due to wide range of alternatives, voicemails are hardly ever left
with a mobile phone the foregrounding of location may be needed whilst landline assumes some privacy
Overlapping
enthusiastic or dominant?
spontaneous
from a company, may be 'scripted'
Turn-Taking
Theories
Fairclough
computers imitate human interaction
e.g. "Are you sure?"
computers do 'turn-taking'
Werry
in internet chat, people use more letters than necessary to imitate speech or semantic nuances
texts and emails are like spoken language because of turn-taking and informality
Accommodation Theory, Politeness & Conversational Maxims
Annotations:
See more on attached resource
Attachments:
Spoken Language Theories
Brown and Levinson
Synchronous Communication (instant, in 'real-time')
e.g. internet chat
Asynchronous Communication (delay between sending & receiving)
e.g. texts, emails
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