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Created by Hazel Meades
over 11 years ago
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| Question | Answer |
| Sociolect | Lexis and grammar used by a social or generational group e.g: youth club. |
| Dialect | Grammar and lexis specific to a location or area. |
| Received pronounciation | A regionally neutral accent that people speak with. E.g: Queen's English, BBC English. |
| Accent | The way words are pronounced in a specific geographical area. |
| Mode | Whether the text is spoken or written. |
| Divergence | When you alter your language so it differs from the group. Often done to highlight yourself as an individual or to sound superior. |
| Multi-modal | Overlap between spoken and written language. |
| Genre | A recognisable text with a distinct set of conventions. |
| Oppositional view | States that speech and writing are completely different. |
| Standard English | A variety of English used in this country with no base or dialect. It carries the most prestige and is used by institutions. |
| Idiolect | A unique language style that develops because of personal characteristics and social experiences. |
| Pragmatics | The underlying meaning. |
| Cataphoric referencing | Referencing forwards to an as yet undisclosed lexical item. |
| Anaphoric referencing | Referencing back to an already stated lexical item. |
| Lexis and semantics | Vocabulary and type of word class. |
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