Diglossia

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DIGLOSSIA Youssef Tamer Associate Professor Department Of English Studies Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences Ibn Zohr University, Agadir, Morocco

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Key scholars Charles A. Ferguson (1921-­‐1998)
 Diglossia, 1959, Word vol. 15: 325-­‐340
 -­‐introduces the concept ! Joshua A. Fishman (1926-­‐)
 -­‐develops Ferguson’s ideas
 -­‐introduces ‘extended bilingualism’

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Early Definition (1959) à

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p.88

Ferguson: Diglossia is a relatively stable language situation, in which, in addition to the primary dialects of the language, there is a very divergent, highly codified superposed variety… which is learned largely by formal education and is used for most written and formal spoken purposes. WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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The Features of Diglossia 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

Function Prestige Literary heritage Acquisition Standardization Stability Grammar Lexicon Phonology WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM

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1. Function H Sermon

L

X

Instruction to servants

X

Speech in parliament

X

University lecture

X

Conversation with friends Newspaper editorial Etc. WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM

X X


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2. Prestige • The speakers regard H as superior to L in a number of respects. • E.g. H is considered more educated, more beautiful, more logical, better able to express important thoughts, etc. WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM

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3. Literary Heritage There is a sizable body of written literature in H which is held in high esteem by the speech community.

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4. Acquisition • Adults use L in speaking to children and children use L in speaking to one another. • The actual learning of H is chiefly accomplished by the means of formal education.

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5. Standardization • There are studies or books on grammars, dictionaries, treatises on pronunciation, styles, and so on, of the H. !

• There is an established norm for pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary which allows variation only within certain limits. WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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6. Stability Diglossia typically persists at least several centuries, and evidence in some cases seems to show that it can last well over a thousand years.

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7. Grammar • H has grammatical categories not present in L and has an inflectional system of nouns and verbs which is much reduced or totally absent in L. !

• Case marking is present in SA while it is absent in MA !

• E.g. Standard German has four cases in the noun; Swiss German has only three cases in the noun. WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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8. Lexicon • H includes in its total lexicon technical terms and learned expressions which have no regular L equivalents, since the subjects involved are rarely if ever discussed in pure L. !

• L includes in its total lexicon popular expressions and the names of very homely objects or objects of very localized distribution which have no regular H equivalents, since the subjects involved are rarely if ever discussed in pure H. WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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9. Phonology • The sound systems of H and L constitutes a single phonological structure of which the L phonology is the basic system. !

• Note: Ferguson states, “It may seem difficult to offer any generalization on the relationships between the phonology on H and L in diglossia in view of the diversity of data. WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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Some Diglossic communities Haiti
 H – French
 L -­‐ Haitian creole

Switzerland
 H – Standard German
 L – Swiss German

Egypt
 H – Classical Arabic
 L – Colloquial Arabic

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Institutional Support Systems L typically acquired at home as a mother tongue – continued use throughout life – familiar interactions H learned through socialisation and never at home Diglossic societies are marked by access restriction – i.e. entry to formal institutions such as school and government requires knowledge of H

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Institutional Support Systems Importance attached by community members to using the right variety in the appropriate context Speakers regard H as superior to L in a number of respects -­‐In some cases speakers claim they do not speak L -­‐alleged superiority for religious and/or literary reasons -­‐strong tradition of formal grammatical study and standardisation associated with H

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Fishman’s diglossia Extended diglossia: ! includes speech communities in which the high and low varieties are not necessarily close related varieties Two or more varieties are mother tongues, each of different segments of the population

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Fishman’s extended diglossia 4 variations of linguistic relationship between High and Low H as classical, L as vernacular, the two being genetically related H as classical, L as vernacular, the two not being genetically related H as written/formal-­‐spoken and L as vernacular, the two being genetically unrelated to each other H as written/formal-­‐spoken and L as vernacular, the two being genetically related to each other WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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Fishman (1972) Diglossia

Bilingualism

+

+

+B +D

+B –D

–B +D

–B –D

Examples: +B +D : Paraguay (Spanish and Guarani) +B - D : Belgium (German and French) - B +D : Russian - B - D : Hypothetical WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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Overlapping Diglossia and Triglossia (Mkifili, 1978) (Youssi, 1995) • A research on the use of English, Swahili and local language. English Swahili Local language

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Overlapping Diglossia and Triglossia (Youssi, 1995) • A research on the use of Arabic in Morocco

Standard Arabic Middle Moroccan Arabic Moroccan Arabic

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Poliglossia (Platt, 1977) A Research in Malaysia • Formal English • Malay • Mandarin • Malay-­‐English • Other Chinese languages • Colloquial Malay WWW.ENGLISHSTUDIESINFO.BLOGSPOT.COM


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