Accommodation Patterns in the Speech of Arabic-Speaking Children and Adolescents: A Variationist Analysis

被引:1
作者
Shetewi, Ourooba [1 ]
机构
[1] Hama Univ, Dept English Language & Literature, Hama, Syria
关键词
speech accommodation; children's linguistic behaviour; dialect contact; language and identity; LINGUISTIC ACCOMMODATION; PHONETIC CONVERGENCE; LANGUAGE; GENDER; COMMUNICATION; STYLE; ACQUISITION;
D O I
10.3390/languages8040236
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
This paper presents a variationist analysis of patterns of speech accommodation by 40 Arabic-speaking children and adolescents (aged 3-17) experiencing dialect contact in a Bedouin speech community near Damascus, Syria. It examines participants' use of the phonological variables (theta), (o), and (q), and the morphophonological feminine suffix (-a) in recorded sociolinguistic interviews and play sessions with two female fieldworkers, a local and an urban speaker, in order to investigate accommodation patterns across different interlocutors. Accommodation patterns were influenced by age, gender, and the linguistic variable under examination. Convergence to the urban interviewer was most evident in the realization of (q), whereas little convergence, and indeed variation, occurred in the realization of (-a), and more convergence occurred in the speech of girls and speakers younger than 15. Divergence and maintenance emerged in the speech of 15-17-year-old male speakers. These patterns are analysed in light of Accommodation Communication Theory and issues of identity and linguistic prestige in Arabic. Accommodative behaviour in the speech of participants exhibits their awareness of the social value of the phonological variables under investigation and demonstrates a high level of sociolinguistic awareness and competence.
引用
收藏
页数:30
相关论文
共 124 条
  • [1] Al-Ali Mohammed., 2010, The Buckingham Journal of Language and Linguistics, V3, P220, DOI [10.5750/bjll.v3i0.30, DOI 10.5750/BJLL.V3I0.30]
  • [2] Al-Wer E., 2003, Approaches to Arabic dialectology, P21
  • [3] Al-Wer E.Herin., 2011, LANGAGE SOCI 26 233T, P59
  • [4] Probing linguistic change in Arabic vernaculars: A sociohistorical perspective
    Al-Wer, Enam
    Horesh, Uri
    Alammar, Deema
    Alaodini, Hind
    Al-Essa, Aziza
    Al-Hawamdeh, Areej
    Al-Qahtani, Khairia
    Ab Hussain, Abeer
    [J]. LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY, 2022, 51 (01) : 29 - 50
  • [5] Al-Wer E, 2007, ROUTL ARAB LINGU SER, V5, P55
  • [6] Al-Wer Enam., 1991, Ph.D. thesis
  • [7] Language, migration, and urbanization: the case of Bethlehem
    Amara, M
    [J]. LINGUISTICS, 2005, 43 (05) : 883 - 901
  • [8] Completion of the consonant inventory of Arabic
    Amayreh, MM
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SPEECH LANGUAGE AND HEARING RESEARCH, 2003, 46 (03): : 517 - 529
  • [9] Andersen E.S., 1984, W J SPEECH COMMUNICA, V48, P125, DOI DOI 10.1080/10570318409374149
  • [10] Andersen Elaine., 1992, Speaking with Style: The Sociolinguistic Skills of Children