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spoken and written language

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Notes comparing spoken and written language for all exam boards and all levels of english language, includes terminology and definitions with applicable theories for analysis and exam questions.

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  • June 10, 2024
  • 5
  • 2023/2024
  • Class notes
  • Self taught
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English language spoken discourse term 2 notes




one-speaker discourse

labov's oral narrative structure
 Abstract = indicates the start of a narrative
 Orientation = provides context
 Complicating action = main events
 Resolution = what finally happened
 Coda = narrative is complete
 Evaluation = remarks that arent essential



Structure

 Turn-taking >> the way in which speakers organise a conversation by speaking and listening
to other participants
 Adjacency pairs >> a two-turn turn-taking structure in which 2 utterances are linked
 Initiation-response-feedback >> a 3-turn structure between 2 speakers- 1 st and 3rd are the
same speaker – in which the 3rd turn comments on the second (seen in education)
 Overlapping >> where one speaker begins to speak before the previous has finished
 Topic management >> control of the subject matter of the conversation
 Discourse marker >> indicates to listeners a change, return or different opinion of the topic
 Back-channelling >> verbal and non-verbal signals which indicate active listening
 Ellipses >> omission of words
 Tag question >> a question formed by attaching an interrogative tag to a declarative




Comparing contrasting texts

 Written and spoken texts
 Written theories

Linguistic features – ideas and theories e.g gender, power, technology

AO4 – using appropriate linguistic concepts and methods, analyse the ways in which language is
used in these 2 texts

Utterance – we tend to speak in short stretches known as utterance

When answering the question

 Don’t list
 Find a similarity and zoom closer to see the fine differences – evaluate the differences in the
light if contextual factors

, Non-fluency features

 Unfilled pauses
 Filled pauses
 Repetition/ spontaneous rephrasing
 Hesitation
 False starts when a speaker begins to speak, stops then starts again

Features of speech

 Ellipses – the emission of words in an understanding manner, grammatically and lexically
correct and purposeful
 Elision – the emission or slurring of one or more words together e.g gonna wassup
 Deixis – words that only make sense in a specific context in which the conversation is taking
place
 Skip connector – a word/phrase that returns conversation to a previous topic
 Back channelling – signs listeners use to make the speaker know their message is being
understood
 Hedging – words which soften/weaken the force of speech or avoid directness to appear
non-threatening
 Repair – resolves problem or correction
 Prosody – main prosodic features:
>> intonation – rising and falling
>> rhythm – depends stresses
>>pitch – frequency and volume
>>pace – tempo and speed
 Discourse markers – pragmatic function (help listener follow conversation and to mark and
signal turn-taking)
 Contraction – the shortening/running together of words, usually with an apostrophe
 Phatic language – utterances for purely social function
 Vague language – words without precise meaning
 Dialect – words and grammar associated with a region
 Taboo language – forbidden/inappropriate
 Paralinguistic features – non-verbal communication, gestures, posture, facial expression
 Prosodic features – the way a speaker communicates through tone, pace, stress, volume
 Synchronous conversation – live communication
 Achromous communication – communication does not occur live




Language levels

 Lexis and semantics
 Grammar and syntax
 Discourse
 Phonology
 Graphology (never in spoken)

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