Sociolinguistic and
English Language
Teaching
Paper Assignment entitled “Speech Community”
By:
Mega Fitri Wulandari
Joko Prayuda
Try Randi Syafutra
Lecturer:
Dr. Alamsyah Harahap, Dip.TESL., M.Lib
GRADUATE PROGRAM OF ENGLISH EDUCATION
UNIVERSITAS BENGKULU
2018
Preface
Thank to Almighty God who has given his bless to the writers for
finishing the English paper assignment entitled “Speech Community”. And we
would like to say thank you to Mr. Dr. Alamsyah Harahap, Dip.TESL., M.Lib as
the lecturer that always guided us and give much knowledge about
Sociolinguistic.
This assignment is the one of Sociolinguistic Task that composed of
Speech Community. We realized this assignment is not perfect but we hope it can
be useful for us. Critics and suggestions are needed to make this assignment be
better.
Hopefully we as college students in Graduate Program of English
Education” can get more understanding in sociolinguistic especially about Speech
Community.
CHAPTERS 1
INTRODUCTION
A. Background of The Study
Language is using by the people individually and for social. People
use language for communicate with other that have dialect, variation and
respect each other is called Speech Community. The term derived from
German Sprachgemeinschaf. Hudson (. 1996, page 29) refused a view stated
that: ‘our sociolinguistic world is not organized in terms of objective “speech
communities”. It is mean that the search for “true” definition of speech
community is hard.
A speech community comes to share a specific set of norms for
language use through living and interacting together, and speech
communities may therefore emerge among all groups that interact frequently
and share certain norms and ideologies. Such groups can be villages,
countries, political or professional communities, communities with shared
interests, hobbies, or lifestyles, or even just groups of friends. Speech
communities may share both particular sets of vocabulary and grammatical
conventions, as well as speech styles and genres, and also norms for how and
when to speak in particular ways.
B. Purpose of The Paper
The aims of this paper are:
1. To explain clearly the definition about Speech Community, Intersecting
Communities and Network and Repertoire.
2. To give the example of Speech Community, Intersecting Communities
and Network and Repertoire.
CHAPTER 2
DISCUSSION
A. Speech Community
Sociolinguistics is the study of the language used between groups
or speakers. The group consists of two members but that is not become the
highest limit for membership of the group. The community can form a group
because of these reasons: social, religion, politics, culture, family, work,
hobbies, etc. The group can be temporary and member can change according
to the purpose of the group. Group arrangement is important because in a
group consist of different individual feelings such as strong or weak feeling,
committing or refusing, and finding success or failure in the group.
For the conclusions when someone di a research about groups, the
thing we have to pay attention is the group consists of individuals who have
complex identities because they have their own habits / attitudes that offer
stereotypes and it can surprise us in many ways The types of groups that are
tried for research are called speech communities for purely purposes. Some
linguists have concluded the existence of "ideal" speech communities.
1. The Definition of Speech Community
Speech community was defined by some experts, they are:
Lyons (1970, p. 326) defined speech community as 'real' speech
societies, it means 'All people who use a particular language (or dialect).
In addition, if speech communities are defined solely by their linguistic
characteristics, we must recognize from each of these definitions that
language itself is a communal possession. And we must also acknowledge
that using linguistic characteristics alone to determine what is or is not in
a speech community has proved so far to be quite impossible because
people do not feel any direct relationship between the linguistic
characteristics of A, B, C, and so on, and the speech community X. The
speaker uses linguistic characteristics to achieve the group identify with,
and group differentiation from , other speakers, but they use other
characteristics as well: social, cultural, political and ethnic, referring to
what are called speech markers by Giles, Scherer, and Taylor (1979, p.
351).
Labov's definition of speech society (1972b, pp. 120-1) and Milroy
(1987a, p. 13) has indicated some of the consequences of speech 'society
is a very abstract concept, one possibility not exclusively linguistic in
nature, and even linguistic norms themselves may vary.
Gumperz (p.101) point out that ‘there are no a priori grounds
which force us to define speech communities so that all members speak
the same language.’ Communities are defined in part through their
relationships with other communities. Internally, the community has
social cohesiveness and externally, its members must find themselves cut
off from other communities in certain ways. Factors that bring cohesion
and differentiation will vary considerably from occasion to o occasion.
Individuals will shift the sense of society as a different factor. Such is the
definition from Bloomfield (1933, p. 42) the speech community is a
group of people who interact by means of speech.’ Gumperz (1971, p.
114) gives another definition of speech community that is not only
members of the speech community arrange a set of grammar rules, but
also there must be an orderly relationship between the use of language
and social structures there must be norms that may differ from sub- group
and social settings.
Hymes (1974, p. 47) disagrees with the opinion of these experts,
He claims that these simply reduce the notion of speech communities to
those of language and in effect, throw out ‘speech community as a
worthwhile concept. He points out that it is impossible to equate language
and speech community when we do not have a clear understanding of the
nature of language. He insist that speech communities cannot be defined
solely through the use of linguistic criteria. The way, in which people see
the language they speak is also important, that is, how they evaluate
accents; how they determine the fact that they speak in one language
more favored than others; and how they determine language boundaries.
In addition, the rules for using language may be as important as feelings
about the language itself.
It can be concluded that the concept or definition of the speech
community is difficult to explain. However, based on the opinions of the
experts above regarding the definition of a speech community can be
concluded that the speech community is a group of people who not only
interact in relation to language, but about how people see the language
they use is also important, namely how their accent, how they determine
the fact that they use one language more often than other languages, and
how they determine language boundaries.
Examples of speech communities are "Black English" or "African-
American Vernacular English (AAVE) created by black people in the
United States. Blacks (Afro-Americans) experienced long suffering when
America still embraced a system of discrimination against to black people
in all fields. To do this resistance, they created something unique of their
own creation to show the existence of a black community that was often
discriminated against by white people in America. One of the distinctive
cultures of Afro-American people in the form of language is "Black
English". The language "Black English" is very contrary to the general
English standard in terms of vocab and grammar. "Black English" is
mostly contained in typical Afro-American art works, rap music. White
people just arbitrarily consider that "Black English" created by Afro-
American people as low-class English language that filled with impolite
vocab and grammar.
2. Intersecting Communities
The fact that people do use expressions such as New York speech,
London Speech and South African Speech indicates that they have some
idea of how a typical’ person from each place speaks, that is of what it is
like to be a member of a particular speech community somewhat loosely
defined. Rosen (1980, pp.56-57) has also indicated some of the problems
you find in trying to call a city like London a speech community and in
describing exactly what characterizes its speech. He says that such cities
cannot be thought of as linguistic patchwork maps, ghetto after ghetto, not
onlly because languages and dialects have no simpe geographical
distribution but also because interaction between them blurs whatever
boundaries might be drawn. Both a geographical model and a social class
model would be false, thought each could contribute to an understanding.
The concept of speech community is less useful than it might be
and we should return to the concept of group as any set of individuals
united for a common end, that end being quite distinct from ends pursued
by other groups. Consequently, a person may belong at any one time to
many different groups depending on the particular ends in view. Example :
at home a person may live in a billingual setting and switch easily back
and forth between two languages. She let this be a female person-may
shop in one of the languages but work in the other. Her accent in one of
the languages may indicate that she can be classified as an immigrant to
the society in which she lives, an immigrant, moreover, form a specific
country. Her accent in the other language shows her to be a native of
region Y in country Z. Outside country Z, however as she now is, she
regards herself as speaking not a Y variety of Z but as speaking Z itself.
She may also have had extensive technical training in her new country and
in her second language and be quite unable to use her first language in
work related to this speciality. In the course of the day, she will switch her
identification from one group to another.
Saville-Troike (1996, p. 357) places even more importance on the
need for individuals to identify themselves with various others but her
views are essentially the same as those of Bolinger :’Individuals may
belong to several speech communiities, just as they may participate in a
variety of social settings. Which one or ones individuals orient themselves
to at any given moment-which set of social and communicative rules they
use is part of strategy of communication. To understand this phenomenon,
one must recognize that each member of community has a repetoire of
social identities and that each identity in a given context is associated with
a number of appropriate verbal and non-verbal forms of expression.
People do use expression indicates that they have some idea of
how a typical person from each place speaks ( to be a member of a
particular speech community somewhat loosely defined. Ex : New York
speech, London speech, South African speech.
Each person speaks their own “typical” way according to its place
of origin or specific speech community.
Rosen claims that cities cannot be thought of as a linguistic
patcwork maps, ghetto after ghetto because :
1. Languages and dialect have no simple geographical distribution.
2. Because interaction between them blurs whatever boundaries might be
drawn.
3. Network and Repertoire
Network is a step to knowing how individuals interact intensely
or not with other individuals. It means, how on what occasion does
individual A interact with individual B, then with C, and return with D?
how often are various relationships: does A interact more often with B
than with C or D? how broad is the relationship between A and B how
many individuals interact with A and B in any activity that makes them
together in some situation?
In network system, there are three types:
- A dense network:
if the people you know and interact with also know and interact with one
another.
- A loose network :
if the people do not do the network connection with other
- A multiplex network:
f the people within it are tied together in more than one way, i.e., not just
through work but also through other social activities.
Then, the dual network is where the path of one individual to another
passes through many steps such as working together, playing together,
and making it possible through mixed marriages’ while a single network
is only intertwined through one step such as they can work or play
together, blend together. The environment around someone has been
connected to several a single, different network, relationships with
relatives, colleagues in free time do not collide, as long as they are
different people. Sometimes this network looks weak and mixed. Milroy
(1980a) involves himself in research on linguistic variation as part of a
network system. He states that additional advantages and that concepts
from networks are very useful because they can focus on relationships
that individuals have rather than some kind of abstract and character
group the statistics itself.
In the communities, no two individuals have similarities in their
linguistic abilities. The community is separated from one to another by
gradations of social class, regional origin, and work; by factors of
religion, gender, nationality and ethnicity; by psychological differences
such as special types of linguistic abilities; and by personal
characteristics. Each individual has a speech repertoire so that the
individual regulates the number of languages or two or more languages.
Repertoire is that he or she control a number of varieties of
language or two or more language. Platt (1975, p. 35) assumes that
speech repertoire is a variety of linguistic varieties in which the speaker
has its share and is used correctly as a member of the speech community.
Since Platts found that both the repertoire of speech communities and
individual repertoires speak worthy in sociolinguistic considerations.
The concepts of repertoire speech itself will be more important if it
applied to individuals than to the groups. The communities can use it to
describe the communicative competencies of individual speakers.
Everyone also will have a distinctive repertoire in his speech.
The speech repertoire is the ability of a person or individual to master a
variety of languages. In the communities, focusing on the repertoires of
individuals and specifically on the precise linguistic choices they make
in well-defined circumstances does seem to offer us some hope of
explaining how people use linguistic choices to bond themselves to
others in very subtle ways. A speaker’s choice of a particular sound,
word, or expression marks that speaker in some way. It can say ‘I am
like you’ or ‘I am not like you.’ When the speaker also has some kind of
range within which to choose, and that choice itself helps to define the
occasion, then many different outcomes are possible.