GCSE - Spoken language study - Terminology

Descripción

GCSE (Spoken Language Study) English Fichas sobre GCSE - Spoken language study - Terminology, creado por Caitlin Hames el 03/04/2015.
Caitlin Hames
Fichas por Caitlin Hames, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Caitlin Hames
Creado por Caitlin Hames hace más de 9 años
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Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
Paralinguistic features -body language - the way you project your voice -facial expressions
Accent The way words are pronounced
Dialect The words used according to an area
Moderation To change your accent or dialect to fit a situation
Socialect Ways of speaking in a social group
Jargon Specialised words particular to a specific thing
Idiolect Words that are individual to you
Received pronunciation (RP) An accent where words are pronounced correctly. Makes people sound more educated. Suggests authority.
Standard English A dialect where the correct words (not slang) are used in the correct order.
Filler Fillers are used to give people thinking time while holding on to the conversation. -errrmm -ahhh -weeelllll -like
Overlapping (//) When people speak over each other. Shows: enthusiasm, power, the need to take over, rudeness
Covert prestige When people change how they speak to fit in with a group. Used to make people sound more 'common' or 'working class'
Overt prestige When people change how they speak to seem posher.
Agenda setting When a person introduces/decides a subject.
Initialism -LOL -OMG -BRB
Ellision -gonna -wanna
False start When a person starts a sentence but then starts it again
Phatic talk Speech where no point is made. Known as 'small talk'
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