What is Speech
Community?
Language is social and individual possession, so the idea of speech community exists within group of people sharing the same linguistic norms and expectation.
The term speech community is derived from the German Sprachgemeinschaft.
“A speech community is a group of people who share a set of linguistic norms and expectations with regard to how their language should be used”.
Certain ambiguities in defining the term Speech Community
There are certain ambiguities related to the term and its
exact used. So the speech community involves varying degrees of emphasis on;
1.
Shared
community membership
2. Shared linguistics communication
Speech Community & Groups in Sociolinguistics
Sociolinguistics studies language in the society and among groups of speakers, so a group has few characteristics.
- Group has at least two or more than two members.
- People can be grouped together for social, religious, cultural, political, professional and vocational purposes.
- Belong to other groups and may or may not even meet face-to-face.
- Organization of the group may be tight or loose.
Definitions of
Speech Community
1. “All the people who use given language /dialect is called speech community
(Lyons, 1970).”
1. “A speech
community as a group of people who interact by means of speech’ (Bloomfield, 1933).”
2. “A speech
community is any human aggregate characterized by
regular and frequent interaction by
means of a shared body of verbal signs and set off from similar aggregates
by significant differences in language usage (Gumperz, 1971).”
3. “Speech
community is not defined by any marked agreement in the use of language elements,
so much as by participation in a set of shared norms. These norms may be
observed in overt types of evaluative behaviour and
by the uniformity of abstract patterns of variation which are invariant with
respect to particular levels of usage (Labov, 1972).”
Characteristics of Speech Community
- Group of people using the same language, dialect, words and grammatical rules as standard.
- Share a specific set of norms for language use through living and interacting together.
- Face to face contact is not necessary.
- Speakers can be monolingual or multilingual but a group held together by frequency of social interaction and set off from surroundings due to their linguistics norms.
Examples of Speech Communities
ü All English speakers
in the world belong to the same speech community.
ü Speaking same
language by the group does not mean belonging to the same community. For
instance, speakers of South Asian English in India and Pakistan shared a
language with the British or American English speakers without sharing their
communities.
Conclusion
Good job.keep it up
ReplyDeletegreat!
ReplyDelete