1st Edition

Speaking With Style The Sociolinguistics Skills of Children

By Elaine Slosburg Andersen Copyright 2014
    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    In acquiring communicative competence, children must learn to speak not only grammatically but also appropriately. Although rules for appropriate language use may vary from culture to culture, they are usually sensitive across languages to many of the same factors, including the context and the topic of the discourse, and the sex, age, familiarity and relative status of the speaker and the listener. There is available detailed evidence of the ways in which adults consistently modify their speech to foreigners, of phonological, syntactic, and lexical markings of language in professional settings, and of differences in men’s and women’s speech that are tied to their roles in society.

    This book examines young children’s knowledge of the sociolinguistic rules that govern appropriate language use, exploring (i) the repertoire of registers (ie speech varieties) that young children possess; (ii) the linguistic devices that they use to mark distinct registers; (iii) the way their skill in using these registers develops.

    1. Introduction 2. The Study of Register Variation 3. An Overview of Developmental Sociolinguistics 4. Methodological Considerations 5. Discourse Structure and Content 6. Variation in Utterance Form and Function 7. Phonological, Lexical and Morphological Markings of Register 8. Conclusions

    Biography

    Elaine Andersen