sociolinguistic in English

adjective

of or relating to sociolinguistics

Use "sociolinguistic" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "sociolinguistic" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "sociolinguistic", or refer to the context using the word "sociolinguistic" in the English Dictionary.

1. This paper reviews Africanisms presented by Greenberg and Larochette and submits a number of others with sociolinguistic and psycholinguistic relevance

2. Backseat Lessons on grammatical rules, pronunciation, and the like - never mind pragmatic or sociolinguistic conventions - take a Backseat to lessons on ideology

3. Thirdly, Autobiographic narratives constitute a valuable information source for historic and diachronic sociolinguistic research in contexts where other sources are scarce (Nekvapil 2003)

4. However, the name Creole Formation was selected because we seek to combine the best of music's Acrolects, mesolects, and basilects to form a new, interesting mix of music.: However, most of the previous sociolinguistic studies

5. === Stratification === William Stewart, in 1965, proposed that the terms Acrolect and basilect be the sociolinguistic labels for the upper and lower boundaries respectively of a post-creole speech continuum

6. William Stewart, in 1965, proposed the terms acrolect, the highest or most prestigious variety on the continuum, and Basilect, the lowest or least prestigious variety, as sociolinguistic labels for the upper and lower boundaries, respectively, of a post-creole speech continuum.

7. The Apologiser, offence type, sincerity and acceptance of the apology This section demonstrates that certain sociolinguistic and pragmatic variables such as social distance, status, who apologises to whom, where, and how ( Obeng 1999 ) and the offence type may affect the “fulsomeness” ( Murphy, 2014 : 73) and the display of sincerity and

8. Anglicisms and calques in upper social class in pre-revolutionary Cuba (1930-1959): a sociolinguistic analysis sulumen), which will be subsequently either abandoned for French loans, or will become regionalisms or archaisms--with some exceptions, like the Turkish-origin term oja (nail polish) which survived and it is still used, in spite of the