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موافق
Grammar
Tenses
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Pre Position
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invitation
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Syntax
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Semantics
pragmatics
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Grammar
Phonetics and Phonology
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Elementary
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Sources of variation Age
المؤلف: Peter Roach
المصدر: English Phonetics and Phonology A practical course
الجزء والصفحة: 241-20
2024-11-17
95
Everybody knows that younger people speak differently from older people. This seems to be true in every society, and many people believe that younger people do this specially to annoy their parents and other people of the older generation, or to make it difficult for their parents to understand what they are saying to their friends. We can look at how younger people speak and guess at how the pronunciation of the language will develop in the future, but such predictions are of limited value: elderly professors can safely try to predict how pronunciation will change over the coming decades because they are not likely to be around to find themselves proved wrong. The speech of young people tends to show more elisions than that of older people. This seems to be true in all cultures, and is usually described by older speakers as "sloppy" or "careless". A sentence like the following: 'What's the point of going to school if there's no social life?' might be pronounced in a careful way as (in phonemic transcription)
wɒts ðə pɔɪnt əv gəʊɪŋ to sku:l ɪf ðəz nəʊ səʊʃḷ laɪf, but a young speaker talking to a friend might (in the area of England where I live) say it in a way that might be transcribed phonetically as s