Analysing the language of discourse communities
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Analysing the language of discourse communities
Elsevier, 2000
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [167]-173) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This text describes how the language used in social interaction evolves from the time the speakers first meet and becomes the in-group code of a given discourse community (in this case the academic community). Most studies reported in the literature of the language of groups and intimates until now have been global, imprecise or unsystematic, and have described the language as a product at a given time; no systematic study appears to have been carried out to follow through the interactions of individuals as they form a group, to discover precisely how and why language changes over time as assumed knowledge grows. Here, the author focuses on the precise changes that occur with increasing knowledge over time, and uses a longitudinal approach to describe the language as a process.
Table of Contents
Part headings: Theory and Methodology
The In-Group
Knowledge Areas
Grammar of the In-Group Code
Lexis of the In-Group Code
Implicitness over Utterences
Function
Further Study
Appendices
References.
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