Difference between revisions of "Idiolect"
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==Example== | ==Example== | ||
| − | Examples for dead languages can only be provided for grapholectal codes and pertain to the domain of [[Document-level_phenomena| phenomena that only emerge in single documents or document groups]]. | + | Examples for dead languages can only be provided for [[grapholect | grapholectal codes]] and pertain to the domain of [[Document-level_phenomena| phenomena that only emerge in single documents or document groups]]. |
==References== | ==References== | ||
Bloch, B. 1948. A set of postulates for phonemic analysis. Language 24, 3-46. | Bloch, B. 1948. A set of postulates for phonemic analysis. Language 24, 3-46. | ||
Latest revision as of 16:01, 19 January 2021
Contents
Translations
idioletto | idiolecte | Idiolekt
Article
Since Bloch (1948), an idiolect is defined as the distinctive individual use of a linguistic code. Its equivalent in the domain of ancient text languages is the related, albeit complex, concept of grapholect.
Example
Examples for dead languages can only be provided for grapholectal codes and pertain to the domain of phenomena that only emerge in single documents or document groups.
References
Bloch, B. 1948. A set of postulates for phonemic analysis. Language 24, 3-46.