"Dialect" Essays and Research Papers

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    In a globalised world the spread of English has adversely affected language diversity and cultural identity. Agree‚ disagree or partly agree. This essay examines the impact the adoption of English as a common language has had on the languages and culture of the Aboriginal people of Australia. I will argue that factors other than the spread of English have adversely affected Australian Aboriginal (Aboriginal) language diversity and that Aboriginal cultural identity is not rooted solely in language

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    A STUDY ON THE IMPORTANCE OF ENGLISH COMPETENCY IN MALAYSIA EMPLOYABILITY Introduction Background of study -background of my topic -what employability is -malaysia context -relation of English competency with employability -cite who was doing research anchoring this study outside Malaysia -cite () inside Malaysia In the new landscape of global employment‚ most business organizations require employees to possess not only industry-specific technical knowledge but also employability skills

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    No Accommodation? The language of Stanley and Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire David Kinder The dynamic opposition between Blanche and Stanley in A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most important forces in the play. Williams creates and maintains an antipathy and tension between them so that‚ despite the audience’s horror at what Stanley does to Blanche in scene 10‚ the fact that there is a final clash between the two characters comes as no surprise to us. Stanley’s gruesome boast to Blanche

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    Tone Of Pinyin

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    If you want to speak Chinese the very first thing you should do is to spend at least a month just mastering the basic phonetics of the Chinese alphabet. However Chinese alphabets are not the same as English. We have other name to call it Pinyin. Chinese is a tonal language: say Pinyin seems like “Alphabets + Tones” like: “nǐhǎo !”—hello! Learn the Tones Mandarin is a tonal language‚ which means if you say a word with the wrong tone or inflection‚ you can be misunderstood. For example: “ma”There

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    Modern Code Switching

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    Modern Use of Euphemisms Code switching‚ lying‚ and slang play important roles in how people interact with one another. As society moves into a more technological age‚ the way humans interact with each other changes drastically. The most important areas in which code changing plays its role would appear in how people‚ particularly teenagers‚ interact with parents‚ friends‚ and teachers. As they “are milder or less abrasive form of a negative description instead of its original‚ unsympathetic form”

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    In the essay “If Black English Isn’t a Language‚ Then Tell Me‚ What Is?”‚ James Baldwin argues that languages evolve based on the environments in which they are spoken. Baldwin claims that‚ “people evolve a language in order to describe and thus control their circumstances [...] [People from different regions] are not saying‚ and cannot be saying‚ the same things: They each have very different realities to articulate” (1). Essentially‚ people’s environments play a large role in the way they speak

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    The differences between the way we speak changes based on our situation and surroundings. We are affected by whether the situation is formal‚ based on our knowledge of a subject‚ or who we are around. People can switch the way we speak at a moments notice. A person can go from speaking slang to speaking properly and grammatically correct when the occasion arises. A person can speak to a woman differently than a man or be overpowered by another person’s voice. Most people go through these transitions

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    Samuel Johnson in his‚ Preface to a Dictionary of the English Language‚ employs a multitude of rhetorical strategies to aid the development of his argument that the English language must be standardized and that lexicographers have had their valuable positions destroyed. Johnson begins by constructing the first paragraph through the employment of anaphora‚ continually repeating “to be” at the beginning of each clause. Through this structure‚ Johnson presents to the reader how the lower class workers

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    The article‚ “A Cultural Line in the Sand” by Thomas Lake‚ describes the example of a vernacular region as the South. A vernacular region is a place people believe exists as part of their cultural identity. The region of the South has people with “Southern accent(s) and learned Southern ways.” Some also think “we’re losing our Southern.” The term vernacular applies to the South because the people there believe it exists as part of their culture. The people of the South have customs that immerge

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    South Africa is diverse in culture but could be unified in language. English should be South Africa ’s unifying language. It is necessary to understand what nationhood is‚ so that you the reader realise that a national language does not alter a nation. It binds the nation. I will also discuss South Africa ’s diverse cultures and how a unifying language can merge these cultures. Lastly‚ I will demonstrate the links between language and identity. <br> <br>The concept of a nation is not easily defined

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