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1

Ivanishcheva, Olga. "The Kola Saami Languages: Contemporary Sociolinguistic Situation." Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal 1, no. 6 (2014): 96–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.14738/assrj.16.552.

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2

Kaplunova, Maria Ya. "PROGNOSTIC METHODS IN SOCIOLINGUISTICS." Sociolingvistika 1, no. 1 (2020): 54–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.37892/2713-2951-2020-1-1-54-62.

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Language policy in multiethnic states includes prognostic aspect as a necessary component for making better decisions within a changing language situation. At present, when the speed of decision-making in all spheres of human activity has significantly increased, there is a need for additional involvement of forecasting methods from the sciences related to sociolinguistics. The article provides an overview of forecasting methods traditionally used in Russian sociolinguistics. In order to increase interest in this aspect, sociolinguists analyze the possibility of introducing key methods from other interdisciplinary sciences to predict language development in sociolinguistic studies.
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Managan, Kathe. "The sociolinguistic situation in Guadeloupe." Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 31, no. 2 (2016): 253–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.31.2.02man.

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In the literature on Caribbean creoles two descriptive models have dominated to explain the structures of linguistic codes, the relationships between them, and their distribution: diglossia and the creole continuum. Most Anglophone linguists have argued that it is most accurate to describe the linguistic contexts of Martinique and Guadeloupe as stable diglossic situations in which two recognizable linguistic varieties with specific functional assignments are spoken. They contrast the French Antilles with the Caribbean islands where an English-lexifer creole is spoken, described as examples of creole continua. This paper reconsiders the applicability of the diglossia model for describing the linguistic varieties in Guadeloupe and the patterns of their use. I explain why most Antillean scholars describe the French Antilles as examples of diglossia, yet also acknowledge a creole continuum with intermediate varieties of both French and Kréyòl. As a further point, I consider whether or not Guadeloupe’s linguistic situation is best described as a stable one. In doing so, I counter the argument of Meyjes (1995) that language shift is occurring in favor of French monolingualism. My goal in this paper is to foster dialogue between Francophone and Anglophone creolists and to clarify some of our basic assumptions about Caribbean creoles.
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Comajoan, Llorenç. "THE SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION OF CATALAN AT THE TURN OF THE 21ST CENTURY: IMMIGRATION AND INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION." Catalan Review 18, no. 1-2 (2004): 67–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/catr.18.1-2.5.

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This article provides an overview of the Catalan sociolinguistic situation at the turn of the 21st century as well as an introduction to the so-called integrationist approach in sociolinguistics, which takes into account issues of social structure and local practice. The article identifies and discusses three main challenges for Catalan: the sociolinguistic situation of the language prior to heightened immigration in the 1990s; attitudes towards the new immigrants (largely from Africa, Latin America, and Asia), and the intergenerational transmission of Catalan. Each challenge is discussed in light of the current sociolinguistic research based on census data and surveys. The article concludes with a consideration of future prospects for the Catalan language within the changing political and social climate of Spain and Catalonia.
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Oreshkina, Maria V. "THE STATE LANGUAGE." Sociolingvistika 1, no. 1 (2020): 109–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.37892/2713-2951-2020-1-1-109-123.

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The Sociolinguistic Glossary aims to provide a systematized corpus of basic terms and concepts of modern sociolinguistics, which since the second half of the XXth century has been rapidly developing at the junction of various humanities and social sciences and is being replenished with new concepts of an interdisciplinary nature, acquiring and developing its own conceptual and terminological apparatus. The articles of the Sociolinguistic Glossary will be devoted to the most important topical issues of sociolinguistics-language and society, language and nation, interaction of language and culture, bilingualism and multilingualism, language policy and language legislation, language planning, as well as concepts used in sociolinguistics as fundamental: language situation, language policy, language conflict, language contact, methods of sociolinguistic research, etc. Special attention in the glossary entries will be given to the languages of Russia.
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Bitkeeva, Aysa, Monika Wingender, and Vida Mikhalchenko. "Language Prognosis and Language Diversity in the Russian Federation: Sociolinguistic Aspect." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 2. Jazykoznanije, no. 3 (November 2019): 6–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu2.2019.3.1.

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The article considers the methodological basis of sociolinguistic research into language perspectives with a focus on linguistic diversity in the Russian Federation, the study of which is closely connected with such sociolinguistic concepts as language situation, language policy and language planning. Оver the recent decades, sociolinguistics has witnessed a real boom in new research showing a growing variety of methods for studying linguistic diversity. Closer consideration of these papers shows that the authors focus on the search for tools to analyze the prerequisites, history and current situation of linguistic diversity. However, research methods for the future development of linguistic diversity – linguistic forecasting, lack for scientific representation. Analysis of the prospects for the development of languages in present-day conditions is no less relevant research topic. The identification of the laws of language development requires a comprehensive approach from the position of sociolinguistics, which leads to the multifaceted nature of scientific research, the consideration of the object not only from the linguistic point of view, but also from sociolinguistic, psycholinguistic, ethnolinguistic etc. factors. The authors present an overview of sociolinguistic methods. As part of a combination of methods, which is justified by the variety of goals and subjects of linguistic forecasting, the authors analyze some possible methods of sociolinguistic forecasting (parametric, statistical, discursive) and their practical application in the study of linguistic diversity. The article concludes with forecasts for linguistic diversity in the Russian Federation.
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7

Colonna, Romain. "Réévaluer le conflit diglossique en Corse: apports et dépassements de la sociolinguistique du conflit." International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2020, no. 261 (2020): 85–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ijsl-2019-2061.

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AbstractThis article attempts to establish the important links between Corsican sociolinguistics and Catalan sociolinguistics. To this end, it returns to the main characteristics of Catalan sociolinguistics through the notion of “diglossia” and “language conflict” it generates, notions that have largely fed minority studies. Moreover, the terms of the famous Catalan dilemma are clearly stated by the substitution of the dominated language or its normalization as inevitable outcomes of linguistic conflict. The reflection tries to establish the parallels between the various situations and the passage from the Catalan elaboration of a conceptual tooling in a situation of domination to the Corsican sociolinguistic and political fields. Finally, we propose to re-evaluate the initial Catalan conceptual framework in order to better adapt it to the Corsican situation, notably by showing some limits of this framework in terms of diglossic polarities and representations.
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8

Xi Yan and Andrew Moody. "Language and society in Macao." Chinese Language and Discourse 1, no. 2 (2010): 293–324. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cld.1.2.07xi.

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The present study attempts to comprehensively review the sociolinguistic literature on Macao from the past three decades by focusing on four key research themes found in previous studies: (1) languages, dialects and specialized languages, (2) language contact, (3) language attitudes and identity construction and (4) language planning and language policy. By presenting a fuller picture of previous studies of language and society in Macao it is argued that the sociolinguistic situation of Macao should not be overlooked in the study of Chinese sociolinguistics.
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9

Pratiwi, Yossi, and Sridelli Dakhi. "Mastery Of Sociolinguistic Concepts Of Pragmatic Skills By Junior High School Students." Jurnal Pendidikan LLDIKTI Wilayah 1 (JUDIK) 1, no. 1 (2021): 18–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.54076/judik.v1i1.9.

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Abstract. Skilled in pragmatic language, means skilled in using language forms ( words, phrases and clauses appropriately according to the conditions, situations and social contexts behind it. Such pragmatic skills may be established if the situation, conditions and social context behind the use of the language can be adequately mastered. This study aims to describe the percentage of contributions to the mastery of sociolinguistic concepts with pragmatic skills. In line with the purpose of the study, sociolinguistic mastery data with pragmatic skills of 28 sample people netted with test instruments and analyzed with statistics r¬2.From the results of the analysis conducted, obtained a determination index of 0.78 which means; mastery of sociolinguistic concepts contributes 78% to the achievement of students' pragmatic skills. In accordance with the results of the above analysis, it can be concluded that mastery of sociolinguistic concepts is a variable of criteria that contributes very meaningfully to the improvement of pragmatic skills. Thus, the research hypothesis yaang said that the mastery of the concept of sociolinguistics contributes meaningfully to the development of pragmatic skills of students of SMP Negeri 1 Nias Selatan, the truth is proven
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10

Migge, Bettina, and Isabelle Léglise. "Assessing the sociolinguistic situation of the Maroon creoles." Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 30, no. 1 (2015): 63–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.30.1.03mig.

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Recent anthropological and socio-historical research on Maroon populations suggests that Maroon communities have undergone significant social change since the 1960s spurred by processes of urbanization. However, to date very little is known about how these social changes are impacting on the Maroon Creoles as there is very little sociolinguistic research being carried out in the region. The aim of this paper is to examine the sociolinguistic context of the Maroon Creoles in the light of data from two recent sociolinguistic surveys carried out in Suriname and French Guiana. The findings demonstrate that the sociolinguistic status of Maroon languages has undergone various changes. Several of them are now well represented in French Guiana and, as additional languages, are gaining speakers both in Suriname and French Guiana. While their speakers increasingly practice them together with other languages, thus displaying their multilingual repertoire, there is little indication that their survival is threatened because their speakers predominantly hold positive attitudes towards them.
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11

Borisov, Sergej. "Czech language in Serbian Banat: sociolinguistic situation." Slavic World: Commonality and Diversity, no. 2019 (2019): 172–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2619-0869.2019.2.1.

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12

SWISHER VIRGINIA, M., and D. McKEE. "The Sociolinguistic Situation of Natural Sign Languages." Applied Linguistics 10, no. 3 (1989): 294–312. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/applin/10.3.294.

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13

PIYAZBAYEVA, A. "THE LANGUAGE SITUATION OF KAZAKHSTAN: SOCIOLINGUISTIC ANALYSIS." Iasaýı ýnıversıtetіnіń habarshysy, no. 1 (March 30, 2021): 220–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.47526/habarshy.vi1.395.

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Language is a social phenomenon that exists in human society. Any language the Society performs communicative (means of communication), expressive (means of revealing thoughts), constructive (means of thinking), accumulative (skills acquired from experience and knowledge), cumulative (accumulation), transformative (transfer), etc. These are the main functions of the language, which are inherent in different levels of development at different stages and are innate components that do not change in their own system. In addition, the social functions of the language are a reflection of the use and use of the same basic functions of the language in different social environments, spheres of public life, and in different purposes and situations. The factors influencing the formation of the public environment in the Kazakh language are the system of Education, Culture, mass media, departments and departments of language development in each institution that monitor the conduct of office work in the state language, etc. institutions and public organizations, as well as the state authorities themselves. At the same time, the problem of the language situation in modern Kazakhstan is reflected in the address of the head of State N.A. Nazarbayev “New Kazakhstan in the new world” in 2009, where in order to ensure the competitiveness of the country and its citizens, it is proposed to gradually implement the cultural project “trinity of languages” in accordance with the need to develop trilingualism, i.e. Kazakh as the state language, Russian as the language of International Communication, and English as the language of successful integration into the global economy.In this regard, a number of scientific studies are currently underway to study and analyze the social problems of the Kazakh language. In terms of the language reform associated with the transition to a new alphabet in Kazakhstan, it is particularly relevant to republishing and defining the viable parameters of the language.
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14

Likhachiova, Alla. "On the Concepts of Imported Language and Newspeakerism in the Sociolinguistic Context of Lithuania." Slavistica Vilnensis 65, no. 2 (2020): 116–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/slavviln.2020.65(2).51.

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This article outlines the advantages of introducing some new terms to describe the current sociolinguistic situation in Lithuania. Its essential components are the heterogeneity of the country’s ethno-linguistic landscape, intensive internal and external migration and the different types of language practices within the country, which are the result of the first two factors. The term “imported language” proposed by the author of the article and the term “newspeakerism”, which has recently become established in European sociolinguistics, have not yet been used in the works of Lithuanian sociolinguists. However, these terms can be important for describing the linguistic specifics of some regions of Lithuania. The first term seems appropriate to denote the language of immigrants, which is used relatively widely in the host country, not only in family, but also in the everyday and official communication, and the second – for the sociolinguistic categorization of such immigrants. Most immigrants are residents of post-Soviet countries with native or well-mastered Russian language, therefore, in the article, it is Russian that is defined as an imported language.
 The paper examines the theoretical prerequisites for the introduction of new terms for a more accurate description of the current linguistic situation in Lithuania and the designation of its participants. Statistical data on migration processes in Lithuania and fragments of interviews with immigrants of chronologically different arrival streams are used.
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15

Hernández-Campoy, Juan Manuel. "Research methods in Sociolinguistics." AILA Review 27 (December 31, 2014): 5–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aila.27.01her.

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The development of Sociolinguistics has been qualitatively and quantitatively outstanding within Linguistic Science since its beginning in the 1950s, with a steady growth in both theoretical and methodological developments as well as in its interdisciplinary directions within the spectrum of language and society. Field methods in sociolinguistic studies have been motivated by the various research objectives pursued: sociological, sociolinguistic, or linguistic goals. The aim of this paper is twofold: (i) to provide a review of the theoretical movements within Sociolinguistics, and, on the basis of this review, (ii) to explore their consequences and implications on the research methods used in the field. This will be achieved by conducting both a retrospective synthesis of past developments and achievements, and an exploration of the current situation and of potential future developments.
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Carlo, Pierpaolo Di. "Towards an understanding of African endogenous multilingualism: ethnography, language ideologies, and the supernatural." International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2018, no. 254 (2018): 139–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ijsl-2018-0037.

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AbstractIn a globalised sociolinguistics “[d]ifferent types of societies must give rise to different types of sociolinguistic study”, as Dick Smakman and Patrick Heinrich argue in the concluding remarks of their (Smakman, Dick. 2015. The westernising mechanisms in sociolinguistics. In Dick Smakman & Patrick Heinrich (eds.),Globalising sociolinguistics. Challenging and expanding theory, 16–35. London: Routledge) bookGlobalising sociolinguistics. Challenging and expanding theory. To this end, a basic condition must be met: both target languages and societies must be well known. This is not the case in much of Central and West Africa: with only few exceptions, here local languages and societies are generally under-researched and sociolinguistic studies have focused mainly on urban contexts, in most cases targeting the interaction between local and colonial languages. With regard to individual multilingualism, this urban-centered perspective risks to limit scholarly attention on processes that, while valid in cities, may not apply everywhere. For one thing, there might still be areas where one can find instances of endogenous multilingualism, where speakers’ language repertoires and ideologies are largely localised. The case in point is offered by the sociolinguistic situation found in Lower Fungom, a rural, marginal, and linguistically highly diverse area of North West Cameroon. The analyses proposed, stemming from a strongly ethnographic approach, lead to reconsider basic notions in mainstream sociolinguistics – such as that of the target of an index – crucially adding spiritual anxieties among the factors conditioning the development of individual multilingual repertoires in local languages.
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Yongsu Youn. "Sociolinguistic Situation of Libya and it’s Language Policy." Journal of Mediterranean Area Studies 17, no. 4 (2015): 57–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.18218/jmas.2015.17.4.57.

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18

Rickford, John R. "Situation: Stylistic Variation in Sociolinguistic Corpora and Theory." Language and Linguistics Compass 8, no. 11 (2014): 590–603. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lnc3.12110.

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19

Young, Richard. "SOCIOLINGUISTIC APPROACHES TO SLA." Annual Review of Applied Linguistics 19 (January 1999): 105–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0267190599190068.

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The study of second language acquisition involves understanding what bilinguals know about their second language and how they acquire and use it. Because acquisition and use occur in a social context, it is important for second–language acquisition researchers to understand the ways in which social context and the acquisition and use of a second language are related. In recent years, our understanding of language as a social phenomenon has increased greatly. In a recent survey of sociolinguistics and language teaching, McKay and Hornberger (1996) divide the field into four related areas: 1) studies of language and society–how large–scale social and political issues affect language use in a particular society, 2) studies of language variation—how the “same” language varies from speaker to speaker, from place to place, and from situation to situation, 3) studies of language and interaction—how language is used in face–to–face communication, and 4) studies of language and culture—how particular cultures privilege some kinds of language over others.
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Mytnik, Irena, та Mar’yana Roslyts’ka. "Suchasna ukrayinsʹka sotsiolinhvistyka: rozvytok teoriyi i prykladni aspekty doslidzhenʹ u pratsyakh predstavnykiv Lʹvivsʹkoho sotsiolinhvistychnoho oseredku". Studia Ucrainica Varsoviensia, № 8 (31 серпня 2020): 149–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/2299-7237suv.8.12.

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The article is devoted to some aspects of the analysis of the interaction of language and society in the modern paradigm. Its results relate to the formation of the content of such categories as “Ukrainian sociolinguistic tradition”, “periods of the development of knowledge about the social nature of language”, “sociological direction in Ukrainian linguistics”, “codification”, “codification on a folk basis”, “asymmetric communication situation”, “social - individual nature of family communication”, “social nature of a name”, “social functions of the Ukrainian language in the church”, “conversion to Orthodoxy of Greek Catholics”, “Ukrainization in the 20-30s of the twentieth century”. Researchers also analyze modern aspects of language-nation interaction, language-national security, the concept of “institutional language management”, “language discrimination”, “hate speech as a form of discursive discrimination”, “linguistic landscape”, informal names in the socio-group “ students”, communication in the socio-group “political elite”, etc. In general, the results obtained in the works of representatives of Lviv sociolinguistic circle contribute to the development of the terminological system and the categorical base of historical, theoretical, applied and cognitive sociolinguistics.
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Gorenko, G. M. "SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION IN SPAIN: PROTECTION OF LANGUAGE AND NATION." Title in english 17, no. 1 (2019): 80–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2410-2423-2019-1-17-80-88.

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Te article analyzes the influence of the processes of globalization and regionalism on the sociolinguistic situation of minority languages that obtain a special value as the sole and main depositories of the national culture. As national minorities begin to claim their linguistic rights, the international community addresses the problem at all levels: community, national and regional. It examines the linguistic situation in Spain, which is considered one of the European countries that best preserves and promotes regional and minority languages, as well as in Catalonia, where the most intense focus of linguistic tension in the EU is currently observed. As the analysis of the current state of the co-ofcial and minority languages operating in Spanish territory shows, the struggle for languages is won in Spain. Its linguistic policy has been fruitful, but, at the same time, it has produced a series of dangerous consequences for the stability and integrity of the Spanish state itself. What now remains for Spain is to undertake the difcult task of preserving itself. Te progressive weakening of the strong ties that previously held the Spanish state together, the erosion of the concept of the sovereign national state and the delegation of the main public powers to a supranational structure have served to give a strong boost to nationalism and reactivate the Catalan independence movement. Terefore, today the State language policy, which is of special importance, must be highly balanced and guided by long-established national interests.
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Gorter, Durk. "A New Sociolinguistic Survey of the Frisian Language Situation." Dutch Crossing 18, no. 2 (1994): 18–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03096564.1994.11784030.

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23

Ilic, Marija. "Dynamics of linguistic and social change: Minority languages in Hungary and the sociolinguistic situation of Serbian." Juznoslovenski filolog, no. 65 (2009): 331–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/jfi0965331i.

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Over the past decades, minority languages and processes of language shift/maintenance have become an important scholarly concern. This paper aims to describe in brief the sociolinguistic situation of the Serbian minority language in Hungary with special attention paid to the relation between language ideology and processes of language shift/maintenance. The first section of this paper presents the current socio-political framework for protection of minority languages in Hungary. The second paper's section provides an overview of the main sociolinguistic surveys of the minority languages in Hungary that have had many centuries of contact with Serbian i.e. German, Romanian, Bulgarian, and Croatian. Finally, the paper provides a quick recapitulation of the Serbian language research in Hungary, and depicts the current sociolinguistic situation of Serbian.
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Rinzat Iriyansah, Muhamad. "Ngoko and Krama in Non Formal Diglosia Situation in Lamongan (A Sociolinguistic Study)." Jurnal KATA 3, no. 1 (2019): 76. http://dx.doi.org/10.22216/kata.v3i1.3954.

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<em>This research aims to observe a linguistic phenomenon in using “ngoko” and “kromo” as speech varieties in informal diglosioa situation of neighborhood domain in Lamongan. Descriptive qualitative method with content analysis teachnique is applied in this research. Non-participant observation with tapping technique was applied in data collection and the researcher also used participant observation with recording technique in some situations. The result shows that the diglossia situation among the speakers of Javanese speech community in Lamongan dominantly occurs in symmetrical and asymmetrical familiar situation. In a familiar symmetrical situation, all language varieties used is ngoko lugu-ngoko lugu. It indicates that the paralell social factor and close relationship among speakers cause the use of ngoko variety with specific variant of ngoko lugu. On the other hand, the familiar asymmetrical situation is dominated by the use of ngoko lugu-ngoko lugu variety and the rest are varieties of ngoko alus-ngoko alus and ngoko alus-ngoko lugu as well as the T variety which is krama lugu-krama lugu.</em>
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Milkova, Aleksandra Alekseevna, Alina Vafaevna Kinziabaeva, Mariia Alekseevna Vasileva, Ekaterina Alekseevna Slesova, and Alina Alexandrovna Lubyanaya. "Sociolinguistic analysis of the communication style of users of social networks and messengers." LAPLAGE EM REVISTA 7, no. 3B (2021): 511–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.24115/s2446-6220202173b1582p.511-517.

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The article presents a sociolinguistic analysis of the communication style of users in social networks and messengers. Based on the methods of sociolinguistics and indirect analysis methods of discourse, the usual moments of exchanging messages between users of a certain social group in Viber are compared with their interactions using the same environment in social networks during the occurrence of non-standard situations. The combination of case studies and the study of key moments when relevant offline moments affect the linguistic practices of a particular community can influence the understanding of current semi-social online communication. Accordingly, stylistic and linguistic practices of communication in social networks and messengers bear the imprint of the communication process and are directly related to the topic of the issues discussed. If, outside of a critical situation, such communication will receive an impression of ease and be confirmed by the usage of colloquial words, impulsive abbreviations, named sentences and a significant number of emojis.
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Rusanova, I. Y. "ERGONYMS AS INDICATORS OF SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION OF THE MODERN CITY." Onomastics of the Volga Region, no. 2 (2020): 158–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.34216/2020-2.onomast.158-163.

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Izhevsk, Russia The article discusses results of the analysis of ergonyms of the city Izhevsk. The aim of the research is to study changes in the sociolinguistic situation of a modern multicultural city. Ergonyms that include a national-cultural component are considered, and the influence of language fashion of new ergonymsis also noted.
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Protsukovich, Elena A., Olga N. Morozova, Svetlana V. Androosova, Nadezhda Ya Bulatova, and Olga N. Chernogradskaya. "SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION IN THE IVANOVSKOE SETTLEMENT, SELEMDZHA DISTRICT, AMUR REGION." Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, no. 3 (2017): 74–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2017_3_3_74_85.

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The article presents a sociolinguistic study of the Selemdzha Evenks. The paper gives a historical overview of establishing and development of the Ivanovskoe settlement of the Selemdzha district of the Amur Region. Statistical data on the population structure of the settlement is given. Analysis of the contemporary language situation is carried out in the place of compact settlement of the Evenks. The results clearly indicate the replacement of the Evenki language from all spheres of its use by the dominating Russian language. We also performed a pilot study of spontaneous speech of one of the few representatives of the Evenki ethnos who are fluent in their native language. Frequency and peculiarities of Russian insertions into Evenki speech are demonstrated.
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BLANCHET, PHILIPPE, and NIGEL ARMSTRONG. "The sociolinguistic situation of ‘contemporary dialects of French’ in France today: an overview of recent contributions on the dialectalisation of Standard French." Journal of French Language Studies 16, no. 3 (2006): 251–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959269506002572.

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This article presents a synthesis of the sociolinguistic situation of what the authors refer to as the ‘contemporary dialects’ of French in the France of today. The introduction emphasises the methodological and conceptual problems attending any such definition and evaluation, attempting to clarify the complex situation and to identify the various kinds of ‘dialects’, ‘uses’ and ‘speakers’. We then concentrate on the regional ‘dialects’ of French in continental France, urban and rural, and summarise a series of important recent studies, concentrating on local variation. We also distinguish the sociolinguistic situations of the northern and the southern parts of the country. Even though France is known to be a highly centralised country, whose linguistic policy has been aiming at monolingualism for the past two centuries, the article offers some possibly surprising and nuanced results that show more variation than established opinion would generally admit about contemporary France.
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Shamina, Elena A. "LITERARY CHARACTERS’ SPEECH AS A MIRROR OF THE SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION: A PHONETIC APPROACH." Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, no. 3 (2017): 94–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2017_3_3_94_109.

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The article deals with the representation of literary characters’ pronunciation in books by modern Russian, British, American (USA), Australian and Spanish writers. It shows how the author’s comments, as well as alternative spellings and other visual means of registering segmental and prosodic features of speech are used to point to a foreign accent, a regional or social dialect, or individual pronunciation patterns, etc. Frequencies of the use of the literary tool in Russian, English and Spanish literatures are presented. The conclusion emphasizes the sociolinguistic validity of book characters’ phonetic portraying and the adequate picture of the sociolinguistic situation in the country drawn with its help.
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Данилевська, О. М. "LINGUISTIC SITUATION IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS OF UKRAINE (BASED ON SOCIOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH)." Opera in linguistica ukrainiana 2, no. 24 (2017): 28–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.18524/2414-0627.2017.24.131401.

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31

Bojovic, Draga. "THE SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION IN PRESENT-DAY MONTENEGRO – SERBIAN STUDIES, MONTENEGRIN STUDIES." Concept: philosophy, religion, culture 4, no. 8 (2018): 132–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.24833/2541-8831-2018-4-8-132-141.

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32

Gautam, Bhim Lal. "Sociolinguistic survey of Nepalese languages." Language Ecology 3, no. 2 (2019): 189–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/le.19004.gau.

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Abstract This paper presents a close inspection of the research conducted with a sociolinguistic survey of Nepalese languages developed by Linguistic Survey of Nepal (LiNSuN) Project (2008–2018). The paper provides an overview of the linguistic situation of Nepal with brief outlines of various linguistic surveys in different times. It also examines the various sociolinguistic surveys (SLS) and their implications. Through a reflection of my personal engagement in various activities of the surveys, e.g. Kaike (Regmi 2012), Bhojpuri and Awadhi (Thakur and Regmi 2013), Khadiya (Dahal and Yadava 2014), Gangai (Gautam and Thakur 2014) and Thulung (Gautam and Sapkota 2014), Aathpahariya (Regmi 2015) and Tharu (Yadav 2015), Limbu (Gautam and Thakur 2016), and Dhuleli (Prasai and Regmi 2017) and Lohwa (Gautam 2017), and quantitative information available in the literature, it is concluded that previous surveys have mainly focused on sociolinguistic features and have disregarded the ethnolinguistic characteristics.
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Sinner, Carsten. "M. Teresa Turell (ed.), Multilingualism in Spain: Sociolinguistic and psycholinguistic aspects of linguistic minority groups. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters, 2001. Pp. xv, 389. US$79.95/£49.95." Language in Society 31, no. 3 (2002): 470–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047404502270293.

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This book is the result of the project Sociolinguistic and Psycholinguistic Aspects of Linguistic Minority Groups in Spain, started in 1993. After the introductory chapter by the editor, the book is divided into four parts, which contain 16 articles on the sociolinguistic situation of a series of established and migrant communities in Spain, viewed from an interdisciplinary standpoint. There are numerous maps and graphics, but no index.
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34

Pieras-Guasp, Felipe. "Direct vs. indirect attitude measurement and the planning of Catalan in Mallorca." Language Problems and Language Planning 26, no. 1 (2002): 51–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/lplp.26.1.04pie.

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Studies of the sociolinguistic situation of Catalan have generally concentrated on Catalonia and have disregarded other territories where Catalan is also native, namely the Valencian Community and the Balearic Islands. Although the three territories share a common history of linguistic oppression, different approaches with respect to language planning on the part of the respective autonomous governments have produced different patterns of sociolinguistic evolution. In this article, the specifics of the island of Mallorca and in particular the sociolinguistic situation of its capital city, Palma, are reviewed. Research on attitudes in the Balearic Islands has made use of direct questionnaires as a tool of analysis. This paper explores the differences between the answers to direct questionnaires and the responses to a matched-guise experiment by way of the traditional distinction between the parameters of status-instrumentality and solidarity-integrativeness. It also proposes that a combination of methods is needed to obtain a clearer picture of the problems still to overcome.
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35

Andree, Aisyah Nadila, Nany Ismail, and Nani Darmayanti. "Form, Meaning and Function of Argot in French Rap Song: Sociolinguistics Study." RETORIKA: Jurnal Ilmu Bahasa 5, no. 2 (2019): 159–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.22225/jr.5.2.1214.159-167.

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Music is one of the way to express emotions, opinions, and also criticism. The lyrics helps us to communicate, and spread its story. Argot in rap song is a sociolinguistic phenomenon that spreads in all languages, including French. The author conducted this study with the aim of knowing the formation of argot used, the meaning behind, and what correlation it has with situation in Marseille. The writer uses descriptive analysis method and theories that support this research are the theory of sociolinguistics and the process of forming argot Calvet (1994), as well as the theory of meaning Baylon and Mignot (1995). The conclusion contains apocope, apheresis, suffixation, and metonymy. The most uses type of formation is metonym. Metonym can deliver a figurative meaning to achieve dramatic effect, but still maintain its secretive nature. Argot has a relation with how singer express their situation and condition within their lyrics.
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36

Kikvidze, Zaal. "THE LANGUAGE SITUATION, SOCIOLINGUISTIC PROFILE FORMULAE AND BI- AND TRILINGUAL BALLOT PAPERS." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTILINGUAL EDUCATION VI, no. 11 (2018): 84–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.22333/ijme.2018.110012.

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37

Artemenko, E. D., and A. S. Bub. "DYNAMICS OF SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION OF KHAKASS-RUSSIAN LANGUAGE INTERACTION IN SOUTH SIBERIA." Rusin 56 (June 2019): 294–311. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/18572685/56/18.

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38

Yudijanto, Tsaniatilwadai Anugrah. "Penggunaan Adverbia Ichiou Dalam Novel Seri Reikan Kentei Dan Kiokuya Dilihat Dari Sudut Pandang “Partisipan”." Janaru Saja : Jurnal Program Studi Sastra Jepang 8, no. 1 (2019): 17–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.34010/js.v8i1.1742.

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Abstract: The purpose of this research is to find out the use of the ichiou adverb in the speech situations from participants with sociolinguistic approach. The method used in this research is descriptive method with qualitative analysis. Data sources are novels and questionnaires. The data collection of this study is choosing a sentence containing the ichiou adverb from six novels. Furthermore, these sentences were used as multiple-choice questionnaire containing the frequency of using ichiou adverb in some situations. As for some conclusions from the results of this research depend on the speech situation, social relations greatly influenced the use of the ichiou adverb only used for family, relatives or close friends. Keywords: Ichiou adverb, sociolinguistics, participant 
 Abstrak: Tujuan dalam penelitian ini yakni untuk mengetahui penggunaan adverbia ichiou dalam beberapa situasi percakapan ditinjau dari penggunanya dengan pendekatan sosiolinguistik. Metode yang digunakan merupakan metode analisis kualitatif. Sumber data yang digunakan berasal dari novel dan angket , sedangkan data dikumpulkan berdasarkan percakapan yang terdapat dalam novel seri Reikan Kentei dan Kiokuya. Beberapa hasil analisis menunjukkan bahwa hubungan sosial memengaruhi penggunaan adverbia ichiou dalam suatu percakapan. 
 Kata kunci: adverbia ichiou, sosiolinguistik, partisipan
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39

Munshi, Sadaf. "Contact-induced language change in a trilingual context." Diachronica 27, no. 1 (2010): 32–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/dia.27.1.02mun.

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This study provides a description and analysis of contact-induced language change in a dialect of Burushaski spoken in Srinagar (India). I present a unique situation in which contact outcomes are reflected via interplay of various sociolinguistic factors involving simultaneous contact with two languages — Kashmiri and Urdu, each affecting the language in a specific way: lexical borrowing from Urdu and structural borrowing from Kashmiri. The effects of contact are examined in a trilingual context where the contact languages are placed in a dominance relationship with Urdu occupying the top of the language hierarchy while Burushaski and Kashmiri are competing at the bottom. Data indicate that lexical borrowing and structural borrowing are two different types of contact phenomena which can occur independently of each other. The two processes are influenced by different sociolinguistic factors which may interact in different ways in different contact situations resulting in different types of contact outcomes.
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40

Andrijenko, Lilija. "ДОСЛІДЖЕННЯ ВІТАЛЬНОСТІ МАЛОПОШИРЕНИХ МОВ УКРАЇНИ: ДОСВІД І ПЕРСПЕКТИВИ". Studia Ukrainica Posnaniensia 9, № 1 (2021): 11–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/sup.2021.9.1.01.

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This study summarizes the achievements of Ukrainian sociolinguistics at the turn of the 21st century in the field of studying the languages of national minorities in Ukraine. The relevance of the study lies in the influence of the new worldview paradigm. Its goal is to preserve and protect humanity’s unique cultural heritage, which is under threat of reduction or destruction. The topicality of sociolinguistic studies of the languages of national minorities is also associated with the changing socio-political context in post-Soviet countries, especially in Ukraine. Consequently, there is a need for sociolinguistic monitoring of the linguistic situation, as well as for studying the conditions and mechanisms of linguistic behavior of minorities in bilingual and multilingual regions. It is also important to develop practical recommendations on the balance of linguistic rights and cultural needs of Ukrainian ethnolinguistic communities. The study is presented as part of the research project entitled “Practices of language protection of the European linguistic and cultural space and the prospects for language policy in Ukraine” (2019–2023). The method of diachronic description allows us to trace the evolution of research ideas and the changes in methodological premises regarding the problems of language evolution in Ukraine from the times of the USSR to the present day.
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41

Cravens, Thomas D., and Luciano Giannelli. "Relative salience of gender and class in a situation of multiple competing norms." Language Variation and Change 7, no. 2 (1995): 261–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954394500001010.

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ABSTRACTOne of the most consistent findings to emerge from sociolinguistic research is that “men use more nonstandard forms, less influenced by the social stigma directed against them; or, conversely, women use more standard forms, responding to the overt prestige associated with them” (Labov, 1990:210). With regard to change, these findings indicate that “women lead in both the acquisition of prestige patterns and the elimination of stigmatized forms” (p. 213), apparently without exception in change from above the level of conscious awareness and in all but a few of the cases studied in change from below. An examination of the social parameters of acceptance and spread of intervocalic spirantization of /p/, /t/, /k/ in Tuscany offers the possibility for testing and refining these precepts in a situation of rule competition that is more complex than most of those studied previously, in that here there are three forms in competition. Building on established principles (e.g., Trudgill, 1972), this sociolinguistic analysis of the interaction of three options provides a more precise understanding of the significance of both gender and class as (co-)conditioners of variation and change.
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42

Karyolemou, Marilena. "A story at the periphery: Documenting, standardising and reviving Cypriot Arabic." International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2019, no. 260 (2019): 1–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ijsl-2019-2045.

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Abstract The aim of this article is to present the current sociolinguistic situation of the Cypriot Maronite community and report on recent efforts to revitalize its language, Cypriot Arabic or Sanna. After a brief historical account, the article focuses on the sociodemographic and sociolinguistic characteristics of the community, which has steadily declined ever since its establishment on the island of Cyprus in the seventh to eighth century AD. Finally, the article discusses the revitalization efforts undertaken since 2007 as well as recent political and social developments that (de)favour the process of revitalization.
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43

Protsukovich, Elena A., Tatyana V. Kravets, Olga N. Morozova, N. Ya Bulatova, and Anna V. Lihanova. "SOCIOLINGUISTICAL SITUATION IN THE BOMNAK VILLAGE, ZEYA DISTRICT, AMUR REGION." Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, no. 3 (2017): 80–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2017_3_4_8g_93.

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The article presents a sociolinguistic study of the Zeya Evenks. The paper gives a historical overview of establishing and development of the Bomnak village of the Zeya district of the Amur Region. Information about the linguistic expedition to Bomnak is given. Analysis of the contemporary language situation is carried out in the place of compact settlement of the Evenks. The results clearly indicate the replacement of the Evenki language from all spheres of its use by the dominating Russian language. We also performed a pilot study of spontaneous speech of one of the few representatives of the Evenki ethnos who are fluent in their native language. Frequency and peculiarities of Russian insertions into Evenki speech are demonstrated.
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44

Khanina, Olesya, and Miriam Meyerhoff. "A case-study in historical sociolinguistics beyond Europe: Reconstructing patterns of multilingualism in a linguistic community in Siberia." Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics 4, no. 2 (2018): 221–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jhsl-2017-0016.

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AbstractA collection of traditional and ‘old life’ stories recorded in the late 1940s is used to reconstruct the sociolinguistic situation of the Enets community in Northern Siberia from the 1850s until the 1930s. The Enets had regular contacts with a number of neighbouring indigenous peoples (Nganasans, Tundra Nenets, Selkups, Evenkis, Dolgans) and later with Russian newcomers. The oral histories often comment on language use, and as a result we can reconstruct not only the languages that the Enets people used in this period, but also the contexts in which they used them. The Enets community’s multilingualism was typically characterized by command of key neighbouring languages, with the occasional command of other more (geographically and socially) remote ones. With close neighbours, language choice seems to have had limited social load, while in cases of trade or agonistic contact, the choice of language in interethnic communication seems to have followed a principle of asymmetric convergence towards the language of the party with the greatest contextual social power. The analysis is founded on a database of dozens of communicative events mentioned in the oral stories (over 50 are analyzed). Ongoing fieldwork on the modern sociolinguistic situation suggests that until quite recently there was considerable stability in the sociolinguistic norms governing multilingual interaction among the Enets.
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45

Мацюк, Галина. "Православізація як суспільний феномен та категорія історичної соціолінгвістики". Studia Ucrainica Varsoviensia 7 (27 листопада 2019): 23–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.6009.

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The purpose of the article is to introduce the concept of „conversion to Orthodoxy ” into the analysis of historical sociolinguistics for the characterization of a language situation caused by the redistribution of Ukrainian territories after the third division of Poland and during the Second World War. The objectives of the article are to reveal the meaning of the concept of „conversion to Orthodoxy” and to identify the linguistic markers of this phenomenon in contemporary religious and secular discourse. The author studies the content of the category „conversion to Orthodoxy” based on new sources that have not yet been put into circulation by sociolinguistics. Methods of analysis: case study, discourse analysis, sociolinguistic correlations, comparative and biographical method, which allowed applying socio-cultural linguistic approach to studying the database. The results related to the conversion to Orthodoxy obtained in the article prove the destruction of the national and religious identity of the Ukrainian territories in the 18th-20th centuries and illustrate intercultural communication under the scheme of integration with assimilation based on a geopolitical factor, violence and terror.
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46

Brown, Becky. "The social consequences of writing Louisiana French." Language in Society 22, no. 1 (1993): 67–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047404500016924.

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ABSTRACTStudies on language shift often refer to the demise of the ousted variety by detailing various stages of language decay and extinction. Problematic for these accounts are well-documented cases of intervening social phenomena, such as language revival movements, which can alter in some way the stages of decline. French Louisiana's situation illustrates language shift interacting with a strong revival movement. In the wake of the revival and in spite of continued shift, another trend is apparent – the writing of Louisiana French. Whereas shift clearly represents a stage of language decline, the creation of a written code functions as a key ingredient for language maintenance. A sociolinguistic analysis of these forces reveals the complexity and the conflict involved in the choice of the written word. (Sociolinguistics, Louisiana French, Cajun, Louisiana French Creole, variation in writing, ethnography, literacy, language maintenance)
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47

Ivanashko, Yulia Р., Olga N. Morozova, Nadezhda Ya Bulatova, and Lubov N. Maksimova. "SOCIOLINGUISTICAL SITUATION IN THE UST-NYUKZHA SETTLEMENT, TYNDA DISTRICT, AMUR REGION." Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, no. 3 (2017): 13–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2017_3_4_13_33.

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The article presents a sociolinguistic study of the Evenks - residents of the Ust-Nyukzha settlement of the Tynda district of the Amur Region. The paper gives the background of the Ust-Nyukzha settlement and statistical data on its ethnic composition. The paper analyzes connected spontaneous speech of the innate of the Ust-Nyukzha settlement - the Evenki language native speakers. The results demonstrate the tendency of using Russian words and morphemes in the Evenki speech. It has been established that Russian insertions into Evenki speech are not predominantly usual. These trends are illustrative of the gradual replacement of the Evenki language of Ust-Nyukzha settlement by the dominating Russian one.
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48

Dorofeev, Yuri V. "ON FUNCTIONING OF LANGUAGES IN THE REPUBLIC OF CRIMEA (sociolinguistic research issues)." Sociolingvistika 1, no. 1 (2020): 79–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.37892/2713-2951-2020-1-1-79-93.

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The article considers the features of the functioning of languages in the Republic of Crimea at the present stage. On the basis of a field survey, the perceptions of speakers of different languages about the current language situation, about the differences between the legal and actual statuses of languages have been defined. The analysis of the language material allows to establish the direction of the development of the language situation in Crimea. At the present stage, the balanced language policy of the Russian Federation has eliminated a number of contradictions, legislatively consolidated the status of different languages in the Crimea and provided the opportunity to study all native languages (including Russian) in educational organizations of the peninsula.
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49

Budiarsa, I. Made. "Language, Dialect And Register Sociolinguistic Perspective." RETORIKA: Jurnal Ilmu Bahasa 1, no. 2 (2017): 379. http://dx.doi.org/10.22225/jr.1.2.42.379-387.

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Sociolinguistics pays attention to the social aspects of human language. Sociolinguistics discusses the relationship between language and society. In the following part of this paper, it will be focussed on the use of (1) language (2) dialects, (3) language variation, (4) social stratification, (5) register. This discussion talks about the five types of those topics because they are really problematic sort of things, which relate the social life of the local people. In relation to this, the most important point is to distinguish the terms from one to another. There are three main points to discuss: language, dialects and register. Languages which are used as medium of communication have many varieties. These language variations are created by the existence of social stratification in the community. Social stratification will determine the form of language use by the speakers who involve in the interaction. The language variation can be in the form of dialects and register. Dialect of a language correlates with such social factors such as socio-economic status, age, occupation of the speakers. Dialect is a variety of a particular language which is used by a particular group of speakers that is signaled by systematic markers such as syntactical, phonological, grammatical markers. Dialects which are normally found in the speech community may be in the forms of regional dialect and social dialect. Register is the variation of language according to the use. It means that where the language is used as a means of communication for certain purposes. It depends entirely on the domain of language used. It is also a function of all the other components of speech situation. A formal setting may condition a formal register, characterized by particular lexical items. The informal setting may be reflected in casual register that indicates less formal vocabulary, more non-standard features, greater instances of stigmatized variables, and so on.Keywords: language, dialect, register and sociolinguistic.
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50

Matsiuk, H. P. "Towards a typology of language situations in historical sociolinguistics. The language situation in Kholmshchyna and Pidliashshia in 1815-1915." Movoznavstvo 318, no. 3 (2021): 25–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.33190/0027-2833-318-2021-3-002.

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The article seeks to study a new period in the typological characteristics of language situations related to the functions of the Ukrainian language. The purpose of the article is to analyze the changes in the language situation and the causal interaction of social functions of languages used by the indigenous Ukrainian population on the outskirts of ethnically Ukrainian territory of Kholmshchyna and Pidliashshia in 1815–1915. In order to reach this goal, the author reveals the political factors that led to a variety of language situations, communicative practices, and assimilation processes. The analysis is based on the results of interdisciplinary research on the history, politics, and culture of Kholmshchyna and Pidliashshia, as well as the works on historical sociolinguistics. The sources of analysis include travel records, memoirs, and documents, to which the method of sociolinguistic interpretation and reinterpretation is applied, as well as comparative and biographical methods, elements of discourse analysis. The results testify to three geopolitical influences that changed the directions of development of the language situation: the transition of territories within the Kingdom of Poland to the Russian Empire in 1815; military actions on the territory of Kholmshchyna and Pidliashshia during the First World War in 1914– 1915; the arrival of the new occupation authorities in 1915. In early 20th century, there was a decrease in the number of native speakers of the Ukrainian language: after the permitted conversion from Orthodoxy to the Roman Catholic faith under the tsarist law of 1905 and in connection with the deportation in 1915. Communicative practices of Ukrainians in different spheres of life included a combination of languages: colloquial Ukrainian and Polish, literary Polish, Russian and occasionally Ukrainian, Church Slavonic with Ukrainian and Russian pronunciations, and the German language. Based on the assimilative interaction of the languages, it might be suggested that the life of Ukrainians took place in the face of Polonization. This was particularly a manifestation of the resistance of the Polish and non-Polish population to the tsarist government as an occupation after the uprisings of 1831 and 1863–64, and after 1875, and Russification as a result of the planned conversion of Greek Catholics to Orthodoxy, the creation of new educational institutions and separation on the basis of Lublin and Siedlce Voivodeships
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