Epistemic phrases and adolescent speech in West London
Epistemic phrases and adolescent speech in West London
Adolescents, particularly those in multiethnic, multilingual communities, have become central to sociolinguistic research in the variationist tradition (Cheshire, Nortier & Adger 2015). In several studies of adolescent speech in European urban centres, the same set of Arabic-derived epistemic phrases, namely wallah, wallahi and related phrases meaning ‘swear’, appear to be in use (see e.g., Quist 2005; Opsahl 2009; Lehtonen 2015). In this article, we document how these phrases are used in the speech of adolescents from a borough of West London and demonstrate the functional similarities between the current data and studies of adolescents in other West European contexts. Using a distributional analysis, we also draw several comparisons between our data and data collected in previous studies of adolescent speech in London. We find functional and distributional similarities and contrasts in both cases. We then discuss the consequences of these findings for the study of epistemic markers and their relevance in adolescent speech.
adolescents, discourse-pragmatic variation, epistemicity, variationist sociolinguistics
Oxbury, Rosamund
6705a5cb-57ea-4f9a-a374-ad172f5539aa
Hunt, Matthew
bbe04f7d-80d0-4e89-ab04-56c4f8bab134
Cheshire, Jenny
2bd73ce5-340c-4ed9-b999-9ae5f385d93d
16 August 2023
Oxbury, Rosamund
6705a5cb-57ea-4f9a-a374-ad172f5539aa
Hunt, Matthew
bbe04f7d-80d0-4e89-ab04-56c4f8bab134
Cheshire, Jenny
2bd73ce5-340c-4ed9-b999-9ae5f385d93d
Oxbury, Rosamund, Hunt, Matthew and Cheshire, Jenny
(2023)
Epistemic phrases and adolescent speech in West London.
English Language and Linguistics.
(doi:10.1017/S1360674323000370).
Abstract
Adolescents, particularly those in multiethnic, multilingual communities, have become central to sociolinguistic research in the variationist tradition (Cheshire, Nortier & Adger 2015). In several studies of adolescent speech in European urban centres, the same set of Arabic-derived epistemic phrases, namely wallah, wallahi and related phrases meaning ‘swear’, appear to be in use (see e.g., Quist 2005; Opsahl 2009; Lehtonen 2015). In this article, we document how these phrases are used in the speech of adolescents from a borough of West London and demonstrate the functional similarities between the current data and studies of adolescents in other West European contexts. Using a distributional analysis, we also draw several comparisons between our data and data collected in previous studies of adolescent speech in London. We find functional and distributional similarities and contrasts in both cases. We then discuss the consequences of these findings for the study of epistemic markers and their relevance in adolescent speech.
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Epistemic Phrases - draft 3
- Accepted Manuscript
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epistemic-phrases-and-adolescent-speech-in-west-london
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Accepted/In Press date: 16 June 2023
Published date: 16 August 2023
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press.
Keywords:
adolescents, discourse-pragmatic variation, epistemicity, variationist sociolinguistics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478779
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478779
ISSN: 1360-6743
PURE UUID: 135ab7dd-59f5-4366-bbaf-70dc14984f17
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Date deposited: 10 Jul 2023 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:09
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Contributors
Author:
Rosamund Oxbury
Author:
Matthew Hunt
Author:
Jenny Cheshire
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