Article published In: Applied Folk Linguistics
Edited by Antje Wilton and Martin Stegu
[AILA Review 24] 2011
► pp. 100–115
That which We Call a Rose by any Other Name Would Sound as Sweet
Folk perceptions, status and language variation
Published online: 22 December 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/aila.24.08mck
https://doi.org/10.1075/aila.24.08mck
Folk perceptions of language diversity often differ from the criteria laid out by linguists and have particular implications for applied/sociolinguists since the collective identification of language diversity largely determines the ways in which individuals regard the categorisation of their own (and others) linguistic uses as belonging to a specific social and/or regional variety. Folk perceptions can thus help define speech communities as well as explain sociolinguistic other phenomena. This paper provides a critical analysis of the existing folk linguistic research into language variation in a number of different contexts: the UK, the USA, France and Japan. It is hoped that the information gained will help build up a more detailed sociolinguistic picture of the complex and often contradictory nature of lay individuals’ attitudes towards linguistic variation. In the final sections of the paper the authors argue for a greater deal of recognition within modern linguistics of the value of examining folk perceptions of language diversity.
Cited by (12)
Cited by 12 other publications
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McKenzie, Robert M. & Alexander Gilmore
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