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      • Speech communities play a vital role in shaping individual identity as members adopt specific linguistic features that reflect shared experiences and values. By using the same dialect or language patterns, individuals create a sense of belonging that reinforces group cohesion.
  1. Speech communities are groups that share values and attitudes about language use, varieties and practices. These communities develop through prolonged interaction among those who operate within these shared and recognized beliefs and value systems regarding forms and styles of communication.

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    • Acknowledgments

      The African American speech community. 5. Youth communities:...

    • Speech and Identity
    • Types of Communities
    • Study and Research

    The concept of speech as a means of identifying with a community first emerged in 1960s academia alongside other new fields of research like ethnic and gender studies. Linguists like John Gumperz pioneered research in how personal interaction can influence ways of speaking and interpreting, while Noam Chomsky studied how people interpret language a...

    Speech communities can be large or small, although linguists don't agree on how they're defined. Some, like linguist Muriel Saville-Troike, argue that it's logical to assume that a shared language like English, which is spoken throughout the world, is a speech community. But she differentiates between "hard-shelled" communities, which tend to be in...

    The concept of speech community plays a role in a number of social science, namely sociology, anthropology, linguists, even psychology. People who study issues of migration and ethnic identity use social community theory to study things like how immigrants assimilate into larger societies, for instance. Academics who focus on racial, ethnic, sexual...

    • Richard Nordquist
  2. May 14, 2024 · Charles Hockett, a prominent linguist, defined a speech community as a group of people who share a set of rules for communication. These rules encompass both verbal and non-verbal elements, enabling effective understanding and interaction within the community.

  3. The concept of speech community does not simply focus on groups that speak the same language. Rather, the concept takes as fact that language represents, embodies, constructs and constitutes meaningful participation in society and culture. It also assumes that a mutually intelligible symbolic and ideological communicative system must be at

  4. A speech community is a group of people who share a common language or dialect, as well as social norms and communicative practices that influence how they use that language. These communities are often formed around shared experiences, cultural backgrounds, or social identities, which in turn shape the ways members interact linguistically.

  5. Jan 1, 2004 · Speech community boundaries have been defined by demographic features, such as place or space, shared language use, and shared meanings. Each condition is explored and analyzed in turn.

  6. What makes a speech community? How do they evolve? How are speech communities identified? Speech communities are central to our understanding of how language and interactions occur in societies around the world and in this book readers will find an overview of the main concepts and critical argu-ments surrounding how language and ...