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Markedness

Markedness. Unmarked categories, language, and identities: Are thought of as “natural,” “normal,” or “ordinary” and are therefore less visible Examples: walk ; The Warriors ; “a man” Marked categories, language, and identities: Are thought to somehow differ from the norm or be “other”

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Markedness

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  1. Markedness • Unmarked categories, language, and identities: • Are thought of as “natural,” “normal,” or “ordinary” and are therefore less visible • Examples: walk; The Warriors; “a man” • Marked categories, language, and identities: • Are thought to somehow differ from the norm or be “other” • Examples: walked; The Lady Warriors; “a gay man”

  2. Markedness • Unmarked categories, language, and identities: • Are thought of as “natural,” “normal,” or “ordinary” and are therefore less visible • Examples: walk; The Warriors; “a man” • Marked categories, language, and identities: • Are thought to somehow differ from the norm or be “other” • Examples: walked; The Lady Warriors; “a gay man”

  3. LEVELS OF LINGUISTIC STRUCTURE (from smallest to largest)

  4. Phonology • Phonology = all the patterns in a language that directly involve sounds. • Phoneme = a single sound of a language. • Example: /s/ • These are contrastive (they change the meaning of the words they belong in): kiss vs. kill vs. kick; cat vs. rat vs. bat

  5. Morphology • Rules for how “chunks” of meaning get combined into words • Morpheme: a meaningful unit of language than cannot be further divided into smaller parts. • “Free” vs. “bound” morphemes

  6. Lexicon • The lexicon has to do with vocabulary. • Lexical differences would be differences in vocabulary. • Example: Taylor Swift song: “hella”

  7. From: http://www4.uwm.edu/FLL/linguistics/dialect/staticmaps/q_50.html

  8. Syntax • Rules for combining words into sentences (like grammar) • What syntactic differences can you think of between two languages you speak (e.g., Spanish and English)?

  9. Intonation/Prosody • Patterns of stress and rhythm; the rise and fall of a voice • Example: “I said you should take notes” • “I said you should take notes.” • “I said you should take notes.” • “I said you should take notes.” • Another example: uptalk

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