Event
Speakers, communities and languages – bridging the gaps
Miriam Meyerhoff, Victoria University of Wellington
Two
aspects of language variation and change interest our team. A speech
community is composed of individuals who share the same constraints on
linguistic variables – lots of previous work has shown this is a
meaningful way to define a speech community. This being the case,
variation at the level of the individual becomes another way of defining
varieties, and variation between varieties gives rise to differences
between languages. Hence, the differences between languages have their
roots in individual variation at some point in the past. Or so the
thinking goes. No-one has ever shown this. In our talk, we try to engage
in this exercise of scaling up. We draw on data from a number of
variables differentiating the speech of individual speakers of Bequia
Creole English and map these onto variables that differentiate varieties
of English, these can then (in principle) map onto variables that
differentiate languages. We use statistical tools that are novel to
sociolinguistics to undertake this exercise of scale.