In:Language Variation - European Perspectives VI: Selected papers from the Eighth International Conference on Language Variation in Europe (ICLaVE 8), Leipzig, May 2015
Edited by Isabelle Buchstaller and Beat Siebenhaar
[Studies in Language Variation 19] 2017
► pp. 157–172
Variation in style
Register and lifestyle in Parisian French
Published online: 26 July 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.19.10adl
https://doi.org/10.1075/silv.19.10adl
Abstract
This study presents a sociolinguistic analysis of two linguistic variables of French, subject doubling and subject-verb inversion in wh-questions. First, factor and cluster analyses led to a grouping of the sample into four distinct lifestyle types. Then, statistical tests show that lifestyle, gender, and age are significant external factors, and that lifestyle exhibits the most salient effect. While the lifestyle associated with orthodoxy correlates with a high inversion rate (formal linguistic style) and low doubling rate (informal linguistic style), the group associated with heterodoxy demonstrates the inverse pattern. It stands to reason that sociolinguistic studies can uncover more patterns of variation if they go beyond the standard sociodemographic variables (such as age, gender, etc.) and a ‘narrow’ concept of class.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Data
- 3.Subject-verb inversion in wh-questions and subject doubling in French
- 4.Lifestyle and Bourdieu’s sociocultural theory
- 5.Operationalization of lifestyle
- 5.1Data reduction
- 5.2Factor analysis
- 5.3Cluster analysis
- 6.The effect of lifestyle and other social variables on inversion and doubling
- 6.1Statistical results
- 6.2Discussion
Notes References
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