Difference between revisions of "Variation"

From PALaC Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 3: Line 3:
  
 
==Article==
 
==Article==
Non-diachronic differentiation occurring within a language code, depending on sociolinguistic variables such as prestige, social stratification, perceived social or ethnic identity, circles employing technical jargons, etc. Situations of [[diglossia]] or the existence of [[language contact]] may impact the cases of variation within a language.
+
Non-diachronic differentiation occurring within a language code, depending on sociolinguistic variables such as [[prestige]], social stratification, perceived social or ethnic identity, circles employing [[technical language | technical jargons]], [[diaphasia | contexts of communication]] etc. Situations of [[diglossia]] or the existence of [[language contact]] may impact the cases of variation within a language. Cf. Beccaria 1994, 792-793.
 +
 
 +
==Example==
 +
Among the several Akkadian [[dialect | dialects]], the Old Babylonian one survived the proper Old Babylonian age, and was exported outside Souther Mesopotamia. In several ages and regions, it coexisted with later varieties and, in synchrony, it represented a [[prestige]] code, used for literally and political documents, as opposed to Middle Babylonian or Middle Assyria which emerged, e.g., in epistolary corpora. This is an example of [[diaphasia | diaphasic]] variation.
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
Beccaria, G.L. 1994. Dizionario di Linguistica. Torino.

Revision as of 15:09, 8 March 2021

Translations

variazione | variation linguistique | Variation

Article

Non-diachronic differentiation occurring within a language code, depending on sociolinguistic variables such as prestige, social stratification, perceived social or ethnic identity, circles employing technical jargons, contexts of communication etc. Situations of diglossia or the existence of language contact may impact the cases of variation within a language. Cf. Beccaria 1994, 792-793.

Example

Among the several Akkadian dialects, the Old Babylonian one survived the proper Old Babylonian age, and was exported outside Souther Mesopotamia. In several ages and regions, it coexisted with later varieties and, in synchrony, it represented a prestige code, used for literally and political documents, as opposed to Middle Babylonian or Middle Assyria which emerged, e.g., in epistolary corpora. This is an example of diaphasic variation.

References

Beccaria, G.L. 1994. Dizionario di Linguistica. Torino.