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SPEECH COMMUNITIES

WILDAN BILAL A. | 11211141037
RIZKY YULIA N. | 11211144008
JANJANG KASTORI |
11211144022


A community: a group of people with a
shared set of
activities, practices, beliefs, and social
structures.



A speech community: a group of
people who share similar
ideas, uses, and norms of language.



Language variety: refers to a set of
communicative forms and norms for
their use that are restricted to a
particular group, community or
activities
They use the language according to a set
of norms to share enough characteristics
of pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary
Social network
Another way of describing a particular
speech community in terms of relations
among its individual members.


Tight community: all members of one
group interacting with each other.



Looser community: little interaction
among the members of a group
Internal/external language


External language: all that happens
among people in social contexts.



Internal language: all which happens
inside our minds
Five Key Elements for the Speech
Community
 Foundational condition
-Population
-Area


Improving condition
-Facility
-Identification
-Interaction
Sociolinguistics: the study of language
use within or among groups of
speakers
Group must have at least two
members. Reasons:
social, religious, political, cultural, fami
lial, vocational, etc.
The group may be temporary or quasipermanent
 The purposes of its members may change
 Its members may come and go
 They may also belong to other groups and
may or may not meet face-to-face.
 The organization of the group may be tight or
loose
 The importance of group membership is likely
to vary among individuals within the group

What aspects may cause you to belong in
a speech community & not in another?
“Sociolinguistic variables”










Age
Social Class
Education
Occupation/Hobbies
Region/Space
Family
Religion
Gender
Ethnicity/Race
Intersecting Communities
People do use expressions indicates
that they have some idea of how a
„typical‟ person from each place
speaks -> to be a member of a
particular speech community
somewhat loosely defined.
E.g.: New York speech, London
speech, South African speech
Linguistic Variable











A linguistic item which has identified variants:
Fishin / fishing/ fishen
Car / cah
With / wit / wif
Latin / la?in
thirty / thirdy
Coffee / cowfee
“It was a macao Tom not a parrot!”
He‟s happy / he be happy / he happy
Climbed / clomb
Look for a present for my mom / look for my mom
a present
Each person speaks their own “typical” way
according to its place of origin or specific
speech community
Rosen claims that cities cannot be thought of
as a linguistic patchwork maps, ghetto after
ghetto because:
1. languages and dialects have no simple
geographical distribution
2. interaction between them blurs whatever
boundaries might be drawn
Network Relationships
open network: provides open access
to its users. Information is often new
and of importance, a (serious) blogger
and visitors of blog.
 closed network: mostly strong ties.
Information that flows in those
networks tends to be redundant and
inefficient.

It is important to remember that group is a
relative concept with respect to speech community.


Also that an individual belongs to
various speech communities, at the same time, but
he/she will identify with only one of them.


There is a link between structures of
economic, social and political power and the use of
language.




That variation of the use of language is linked to
other social systems of organization.
Do you think Hip Hop music can be
considered a marker of personal
or/and group identity? How? Why?
 Who forms a part of the community? What do
you share?
 What connects you as a group? What is the
community's purpose?

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Speech communities

  • 1. SPEECH COMMUNITIES WILDAN BILAL A. | 11211141037 RIZKY YULIA N. | 11211144008 JANJANG KASTORI | 11211144022
  • 2.  A community: a group of people with a shared set of activities, practices, beliefs, and social structures.  A speech community: a group of people who share similar ideas, uses, and norms of language.  Language variety: refers to a set of communicative forms and norms for their use that are restricted to a particular group, community or activities
  • 3. They use the language according to a set of norms to share enough characteristics of pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary
  • 4. Social network Another way of describing a particular speech community in terms of relations among its individual members.  Tight community: all members of one group interacting with each other.  Looser community: little interaction among the members of a group
  • 5. Internal/external language  External language: all that happens among people in social contexts.  Internal language: all which happens inside our minds
  • 6. Five Key Elements for the Speech Community  Foundational condition -Population -Area  Improving condition -Facility -Identification -Interaction
  • 7. Sociolinguistics: the study of language use within or among groups of speakers Group must have at least two members. Reasons: social, religious, political, cultural, fami lial, vocational, etc.
  • 8. The group may be temporary or quasipermanent  The purposes of its members may change  Its members may come and go  They may also belong to other groups and may or may not meet face-to-face.  The organization of the group may be tight or loose  The importance of group membership is likely to vary among individuals within the group 
  • 9. What aspects may cause you to belong in a speech community & not in another? “Sociolinguistic variables”          Age Social Class Education Occupation/Hobbies Region/Space Family Religion Gender Ethnicity/Race
  • 10. Intersecting Communities People do use expressions indicates that they have some idea of how a „typical‟ person from each place speaks -> to be a member of a particular speech community somewhat loosely defined. E.g.: New York speech, London speech, South African speech
  • 11. Linguistic Variable           A linguistic item which has identified variants: Fishin / fishing/ fishen Car / cah With / wit / wif Latin / la?in thirty / thirdy Coffee / cowfee “It was a macao Tom not a parrot!” He‟s happy / he be happy / he happy Climbed / clomb Look for a present for my mom / look for my mom a present
  • 12. Each person speaks their own “typical” way according to its place of origin or specific speech community Rosen claims that cities cannot be thought of as a linguistic patchwork maps, ghetto after ghetto because: 1. languages and dialects have no simple geographical distribution 2. interaction between them blurs whatever boundaries might be drawn
  • 13. Network Relationships open network: provides open access to its users. Information is often new and of importance, a (serious) blogger and visitors of blog.  closed network: mostly strong ties. Information that flows in those networks tends to be redundant and inefficient. 
  • 14. It is important to remember that group is a relative concept with respect to speech community.  Also that an individual belongs to various speech communities, at the same time, but he/she will identify with only one of them.  There is a link between structures of economic, social and political power and the use of language.   That variation of the use of language is linked to other social systems of organization.
  • 15. Do you think Hip Hop music can be considered a marker of personal or/and group identity? How? Why?
  • 16.  Who forms a part of the community? What do you share?  What connects you as a group? What is the community's purpose?