Mantex

Tutorials, Study Guides & More

  • HOME
  • REVIEWS
  • TUTORIALS
  • HOW-TO
  • CONTACT
>> Home / 2009 / Archives for September 2009

Archives for September 2009

Similes – how to understand them

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Similes – definition

similes A simile is a figure of speech in which one thing is directly compared with another.

redbtn The comparison is usually signalled by the use of the terms ‘as’ or ‘like’ or ‘such as’.


Examples

He was as strong as a lion

It shot out like a bullet

“Music is such sweet thunder”


Use

redbtn Similes are part of everyday speech. They may be used consciously or unconsciously.

redbtn They are often used in imaginative writing such as fiction and poetry to clarify and enhance an image.

redbtn NB! To say that a girl looks like Marilyn Monroe is not a simile. That’s because two similar things are being directly equated to each other.

redbtn But to say that ‘My heart is like a singing bird’ is a simile. That’s because the two things being likened to each other are quite different – and so an imaginative comparison is being made.

redbtn A simile requires less of an imaginative leap than does a metaphor. A simile states that A is like B, whereas a metaphor suggests that A actually is B.

redbtn The simile is one common component of imagery. This is the process of evoking ideas, people, places, feelings and various other connections in a vivid and effective way.

redbtn Imagery is used in both written and spoken communication in many varieties of form, from advertising to poetry and from chatting to speech-making.

redbtn Simile, metaphor, and symbol are the main types of image making. The result is that communication acquires a creative and vital quality which somehow springs from the essential act of comparison.

redbtn So, a raindrop can become a crystal, fear can become an abyss, and jealousy a monster.

redbtn By employing imagery, we interpret the material world and use language to transmit our vision.

 

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Figures of speech, Grammar, Language, Similes

Slang – how to understand it

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Slang – definition

slang Slang is sometimes described as ‘the language of sub-cultures’ or ‘the language of the streets’.

redbtn It is a term for words or expressions used by small groups of people.

redbtn It tends to be vivid and colourful, and holds a delicate position between the colloquial and the vulgar.


Examples
MONEY dough, lolly, spondulicks
FOOD grub, nosh, scoff
DRINK sloshed, smashed, plastered
SEX nookey, the other, crumpet

Use

redbtn Slang is used in everyday informal speech amongst members of the same group.

redbtn It can often act as a ‘code’ which excludes outsiders.

redbtn Linguistically, it can be usefully seen as a sub-dialect.

redbtn It is hardly used at all in writing — except for stylistic effect.

redbtn Today’s slang can be tomorrow’s Standard English.

redbtn NB! Slang may also date very quickly, like fashion in clothes. Yesterday’s slang can become today’s cliché.

redbtn Eric Partridge [an authority on the subject] identifies a number of reasons for the creation and use of slang:

  • to be different, startling, or original
  • to display one’s membership of a group or club
  • to be secretive or to exclude others
  • to enrich the stock of language
  • to establish a friendly rapport with others
  • to be irreverant or humorous

redbtn Cockney rhyming slang is well known throughout the English speaking population. It is a very stylised form of slang which consists of two main elements:

  • the item being referred to — ‘tea’ for instance
  • a pair of words of which the latter rhymes with the referent — ‘Rosie Lee’

redbtn Thus ‘tea’ becomes ‘Rosie Lee’ [names are often used].

redbtn To make matters more complex, the rhyming word is often omitted. Thus the Cockney slang utterance is abbreviated, so that the listener may hear ‘Make us a cup of Rosie.’

redbtn This practice of omitting the rhyming word creates more interest in the usage, making it into a kind of conundrum or a word game.

redbtn Here are some examples of well-known rhyming slang.

‘Time to go up the apples to bed.’
[Apples and pears = stairs]

‘How do you like my new whistle?’
[Whistle and flute = suit]

‘Let’s have a butcher’s.’
[Butcher’s hook = look]

redbtn It was once thought that rhyming slang was dying out, but the recent fashion for using celebrity names has proved this not to be true – as in Garry Glitter = ‘pint of bitter’, abbreviated to a Garry of course. The alternative might be to order a couple of Britneys (Spears).

redbtn Some forms of slang change very rapidly, for various reasons.

redbtn Teenage slang changes rapidly because people are teenagers for a short period of time. For example, in the early 1990s the term used to express enthusiastic approval was ‘Ace’. Now this would be considered rather dated. It has been replaced by ‘Sound’ — which itself will soon be supplanted by whatever the current teenage culture decides is appropriate.

redbtn ‘Smashing!’ and ‘Super!’ the teenage slang of Enid Blyton stories of the 1930s and 1940s is now used to parody the period and the attitudes from which they sprang. Intrinsically however, it is no different from today’s terms.

redbtn One important function of teenage slang is to create an identity which is distinct from the general adult world. Teenagers for this reason do not generally approve of parents or teachers using their slang terms. This defeats the object of what is essentially a group ‘code’.

redbtn Thus new terms are generated every couple of years. It is interesting that the main slang items are adjectives for extreme approval or extreme disapproval.

redbtn The criminal culture has even more reason to refer in slang terms to the key elements of its activities. This is why there are so many terms for illegal substances. ‘Weed’, ‘draw’, and ‘whacky backy’ are just some of the slang terms for marijuana.

redbtn ‘Exstasy’ is a slang term which has now been adopted into Standard English. This is probably because the chemical term is too complex or difficult to pronounce.

redbtn This process can also occur in reverse. For instance the term ‘muck’ is now slang, but it used to be a Standard English word meaning mud or outdoor dirt.

redbtn The most important lesson regarding the concept of slang is that like all other parts of the language, it is in process. Cockney rhyming slang has stayed with us probably because of its creative and almost poetic element. Also, because of its formulaic nature, Cockney slang can continue to be generated according to the formula, suiting a variety of linguistic purposes.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Grammar, Language, Slang

Speech – how it differs from writing

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Speech – definition

speech Speech is the universal means of oral communication.

redbtn It distinguishes humans from the rest of the animal kingdom.

redbtn Speech (not writing) is considered by linguists as the primary material for study.


Examples

redbtn German, Italian, French, Spanish, are all varieties of European languages.

redbtn Legal, religious, medical, and technical language are all varieties of spoken occupational jargon.

redbtn There are many varieties of spoken language, many of which are used even on an individual basis.


Use

redbtn Speech is innately acquired — unlike writing, which is a skill which has to be learned.

redbtn Speech is used constantly by everyone for a variety of functions, from the passing of information to the sharing of emotions.

redbtn There are no designated human speech organs, but respiratory and digestive organs are adapted to produce speech.

redbtn The pharynx is purely the sound box, shared by other animal species, primarily designed to produce mating, warning, and herding calls.

redbtn Speech and writing are two separate systems and an individual’s linguistic competence depends on the ability to make a clear distinction between the two.

redbtn NB! In linguistic study, speech is primary.

redbtn Speech normally contains hesitations, repetitions, and grammatical ‘errors’. It contains lots of ‘ums’ and ers’, and all sorts of sounds which have no connection with writing as a means of communication.

redbtn Speech is normally accompanied by many other non-verbal features which affect communication — such as intonation and stress, facial expressions, physical gestures, and even bodily posture.

redbtn In the study of language, speech is considered primary and as a system which is entirely separate from writing.

redbtn Children who are learning to write often confuse the two. They produce a written form of speech.

redbtn Maturity is demonstrated by the ability to use a literary style which is completely discrete and separate from speech.

redbtn Humans acquire speech due to their innate programming. Writing on the other hand is a skill which must be learnt in the same way as driving, sewing, or cooking.

redbtn There are still some societies in the world which have no written form of language, but which depend entirely on speech.

redbtn Sign language, among the profoundly hearing-impaired, is a system which can perform all that a spoken language can in terms of communication. In this case, the hands are adapted instead of respiratory and digestive organs in order to communicate.

redbtn As far as Linguistics is concerned, there is no such thing as a primitive language. All languages are equal in potential, to perform any communication task required by its users.

redbtn The organs used in speech are as follows:

lips teeth tongue palate glottis
uvula nose trachea lungs pharynx

redbtn All children develop their ability to use language at approximately the same rate, despite the variations in nationality or circumstances.

redbtn In the process of a child’s development, the acquisition of phonology, semantics and grammar progresses simultaneously.

redbtn This continues until linguistic maturity is reached around the age of seven. After this, an individual’s linguistic competence varies according to training, environment, and perceived necessity.

redbtn This development runs as follows:

Months Sounds
00—03 non-linguistic vocalisations
03—06 babbling
06—09 beginnings of recognisable speech sounds
09—12 one-word sentences such as ‘dada’

redbtn By the age of seven years all the phonological sounds of the language have been acquired.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Grammar, Language, Speech

Spelling rules – how to understand them

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Spelling – definition

spelling rules Spelling is a convention by which words are represented in writing by letters of the alphabet.

spelling rules The spelling of most words is now largely fixed.

spelling rules The relationship between spelling and pronunciation is not consistent.


Examples

The term connection can also be spelled connexion.

Judgement can also be spelled Judgment.

Even spelled can also be spelled spelt!


Use

redbtn Competence in spelling is desirable, but we cannot possibly know the definitive spelling of all the English lexicon.

redbtn Good spelling usually results from an awareness of those words which we need to check in a dictionary.

redbtn Computer spell-checkers are an enhancement to the writing process. They should be used with caution however, as some errors are those of wrong word rather than of spelling.

redbtn For instance, ‘They took there places’. The spell-checker would let that pass.

redbtn NB! Shakespeare used a variety of spellings for his own name.

redbtn Spelling was not generally fixed in English until the eighteenth century. [Samuel Johnson’s dictionary was a landmark in this respect.]

redbtn The following example is from a poem written in the seventeenth century, showing the original spelling of what we would now write as dearly, fain, and enemy:

Yet dearley I love you, and would be loved faine,
But am betroth’d unto your enemie

[JOHN DONNE]

redbtn Spelling mistakes in formal writing create a very bad impression.

redbtn Some words may have more than one acceptable spelling:

connection can be spelled connexion
judgement can be spelled judgment

redbtn Certain organisations such as newspapers and publishers issue rules on spelling for their authors. This is known as House Style.

redbtn Spelling in English does have rules — but there are many exceptions and irregularities. The plural of baby is babies but the plural of donkey is donkeys. We write about honour but the adjective is spelled honorary.

redbtn Even the verb ‘to spell’ itself may be spelled or spelt in the past tense.

redbtn The reason for this irregularity is that English vocabulary is made up of many other languages [Old English, Latin, Greek, and French]. Words from these languages have brought their own spelling characteristics.

redbtn There are minor differences in the spelling of English and American English. Colour is color in the USA, and centre is spelled [or spelt!] center.

redbtn There is no easy way to learn correct spelling. Rules exist, but there are many, many exceptions. You should simply take an interest in the words themselves.

redbtn On the question of possible spelling reform, the American writer Mark Twain has some typically humorous comments to make.


A Plan for the Improvement of English Spelling

For example, in Year 1 that useless letter ‘c’ would be dropped to be replased either by ‘k’ or ‘s’, and likewise ‘x’ would no longer be part of the alphabet. The only kase in which ‘c’ would be retained would be the ‘ch’ formation, which will be dealt with later.

Year 2 might reform ‘w’ spelling, so that ‘which’ and ‘one’ would take the same konsonant, wile Year 3 might well abolish ‘y’ replasing it with ‘i’ and Iear 4 might fiks the ‘g/j’ anomali wonse and for all.

Jenerally, then, the improvement would kontinue iear bai iear with Iear 5 doing awai with useless double konsonants, and Iears 6-12 or so modifaiing vowlz and the rimeining voist and unvoist konsonants.

Bai Iear 15 or sou, it wud fainali bi posibl tu meik ius ov thi ridandant letez ‘c’, ‘y’ and ‘x’ — bai now jast a memori in the maindz ov ould doderez — tu riplais ‘ch’, ‘sh’, and ‘th’ rispektivli.

Fainali, xen, aafte sam 20 iers ov orxogrefkl riform, wi wud hev a lojikl, kohirnt speling in ius xrewawt xe Ingliy-spiking werld.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Grammar, Language, Spelling, Writing

Standard English – how to understand it

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Standard English – definition

standard english The term ‘Standard English’ refers to a dialect which has acquired the status of representing the English language.

redbtn It refers to the content of the utterance rather than the pronunciation.

redbtn However, Standard English is used in both speech and in writing.


Examples

A business letter

Dear Martin Brown
Thankyou for your letter dated July 3, requesting more information on the Snowmobile. We have put a copy of our brochure in the post to you.

A telephone conversation

“Hello. I’m ringing on behalf of my wife, Mary. Unfortunately, she won’t be in today because she’s feeling unwell.”


Use

redbtn Standard English in written form is used in such formal documents as essays, business letters, notices, reports, and memos.

redbtn Standard English in spoken form is used in such formal utterances as business negotiations, public announcements, and news broadcasts.

redbtn Most educated writers use Standard English in all texts – except when a special effect is required.

redbtn It is fairly common for a speaker to use Standard English and deliver it with a regional accent.

redbtn NB! Today’s dialect can become tomorrow’s Standard English.

redbtn Standard English is believed to have evolved by means of a universal linguistic process. The essential concepts concerning standardisation are as follows:

  • an element of conscious engineering always obtains
  • a variety regarded as exclusive is cultivated by an elite
  • standardisation slows down language development
  • a written form always exists, though not always as a standard

redbtn The standardisation process is thought to comprise the following stages:

1. selection
2. acceptance
3. elaboration
4. codification

redbtn If these principles are applied to the English language, we can see how a dialect became Standard English.

redbtn Selection. The origins of standard English lay in the merchant class who had by the fourteenth century settled in London. They spoke an east midland dialect, associated first with Norfolk and later with Northamptonshire, Leicestershire, and Bedfordshire. It had already become a class dialect within London. The lower class Londoners spoke a south east dialect which was the antecedent of Cockney.

redbtn By the end of the fourteenth century the east midland dialect was the embryonic written standard. About 1430, one regional variant of that dialect became increasingly dominant. This selection of a standard was obviously linked with the economic power and the ideas of the new merchant class. This was confirmed by the advent of printing, which created a concrete representation of the merchants’ spoken variety. [Caxton brought the printing press to England in 1475].

redbtn The spoken standard came about later in the Middle Ages for the following reason. Students from all over England mixed in the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, both of which were only sixty miles from London. In this triangle formed by the three centres a great deal of east midland speech would have been heard, and possibly used as a kind of lingua franca (common language) among a socially mobile group. Here then, we see the selection of a certain dialect due to need and function.

redbtn Acceptance By about the middle of the fifteenth century the east midland dialect had been accepted as a written standard by those who wrote official documents. However, this acceptance was made unconsciously.

redbtn [For instance, when Chaucer wrote The Canterbury Tales [1387] in the east midland dialect, his contemporaries had their own, local written varieties. Langland’s Piers Plowman [1362-87] and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight [1370] are both written in dialects which are different than Chaucer’s.]

redbtn Even as late as the sixteenth century, no national literary standard existed. By Shakespeare’s time however, the regional differences had disappeared and a real, national, literary standard prevailed.

redbtn Elaboration Regional dialects of English lost status as their writing systems were displaced by the standard. Their functions became more restricted as the standard became more elaborated. Regional dialects became the medium of ordinary everyday conversation among equals.

redbtn The new written standard now had to function where previously Latin and French had been the norm in legal, ecclesiastical and scholarly matters. By neccessity it thus became elaborated.

redbtn Elaboration when applied to the development of a standard means that the particular variety must cope with all types of communication. Thus any variation within the dialect ceased to be based on region. It was based instead on stylistic function. That meant, for example, that vocabulary could now be differentiated as legal, literary, or technical.

redbtn English language was first used in government and law in 1362, although the use of French persisted alongside it for another century. It is interesting to note in this respect that Milton – one of the great English poets – wrote a great deal of his work in Latin. In 1731 an act of parliament was passed to restrict the use of Latin and French to the province of law. [Even today, the English legal system uses Latin expressions – ‘habeas corpus’, for instance.]

redbtn Codification The process of codification means that the use of language is documented in order to reinforce a certain variety which has been accepted. Codification is easier to effect in written form than in speech, although attempts have been made since the development of a written standard to apply the same practices of codification in speech.

redbtn Codification slows down the natural development of any language because of its aims for minimal variation in form. Criteria for choosing one particular use rather than another are usually related to the vested interests of certain social or economic groups. The impulses behind this codification stem from notions of prestige based on the emulation of social groups considered worthy of esteem.

redbtn Other countries in Europe such as France and Italy set up their own academies designed to monitor language and prescribe certain usages. The Academie Francaise (established in 1635) is still in operation. One of its most recent projects was trying to prohibit the use of ‘Franglais’ [‘Le parking’, ‘le week-end’] which was thought to be making the French language impure. The attempt was not successful.

redbtn In England, eighteenth-century scholars such as Jonathan Swift and Samuel Johnson pressed for the institution of an English academy, but it never happened.

redbtn The phenomenon of the dictionary arrived as a direct result of the desire to codify. Samuel Johnson’s dictionary (1755) was historically significant in that whilst it was a major work of codification, it was the first to acknowledge variation in meaning and usage.

redbtn Important note for teachers. The new National Curriculum requires youngsters to be competent in using “Standard English”. This is quite wrongly taken by many people to refer to accent, when it actually requires pupils to understand the use of standard grammatical constructions, together with a comprehensive standard lexicon.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Grammar, Language, Standard English

Structure – how to understand it

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Structure in grammar – definition

structure in grammar The term ‘structure’ refers to the basic construction or the arrangement of parts in a communication — spoken or written.

structure in grammar In the study of language, the term is being used metaphoricaly.


Examples

redbtn The events of a novel or a play may be arranged in a linear, chronological order to reflect the passing of time. They might on the other hand be arranged so that the end reflects the beginning, presenting a cyclic structure.

redbtn The structure of the English language is its grammar system with discernable patterns such as that of word-order and rules for forming tenses.

redbtn The structure of a conversation might be fairly random or planned, depending on the level of formality and the purpose of the discourse.

redbtn An interview might follow the chronology of a candidate’s curriculum vitae, or it might be structured by a series of questions.

redbtn The structure of a business document might be determined by the route taken by information as it passes through an organisation. On the other hand, it might reflect the stages of a manufacturing process.

redbtn The structure of a poem can often be seen in its rhyme scheme and the arrangement of its verses.


Use

redbtn People structure the content of their speech spontaneously, without any need for deliberate planning.

redbtn The same is not true for writing, where conscious effort is required.

redbtn An awareness of the concept of structure in language use is essential to the speaker or the writer, the listener or the reader.

redbtn Structure can be based on such elements as chronology, alphabetical order, recurring themes, logical sequence of content, and visual layout.

redbtn NB! Readers and speakers are affected by structure, even though they may not be conscious of it.

redbtn The structure of a text or of a spoken item is its foundation. Structure when applied to the English language as a system is its grammar.

redbtn It might be useful to distinguish structure from form in terms of linguistic analysis. The term ‘form’ refers to the finished article as a recognisable artifact such as a novel, report, letter, recipe, sermon, statement, or greeting.

redbtn A letter, for example, has a structure based on the patterning of both its content and its layout. The content is structured according to the convention of giving information in the following order:

  • sender’s address
  • date of writing
  • vocative opening (‘Dear Sir’)
  • content in order of importance
  • conventional salutation (‘Best wishes’)
  • signature of writer

redbtn The structure of the content is complemented by the layout in a conventional letter. The content is organised on the page in a well known pattern.

redbtn Even if a person were twelve feet away from the text it would be recognisable as a letter form — because of the structure of the layout.

redbtn In any text, the content must be organised according to some logical premise. Information which is not consciously structured is disjointed, haphazard, and therefore usually incomprehensible. Efficient communication in speech and writing depends to a great extent on the existence of structure.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Grammar, Language, Speech, Structure, Writing

Style – how to understand it

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Style – definition

style Style is a particular set of characteristics in the use of language.

redbtn These characteristics are the result of choices which may be made consciously or unconsciously.

redbtn The results are speech or writing which may be efficient, idiosyncratic, identifiable, or memorable.


Examples

redbtn The following are examples of good style in instructional writing and prose fiction:

Instructional writing
When approaching a roundabout, watch out for traffic already on it. Take special care to look out for cyclists or motorcyclists ahead or to the side. Give way to traffic on your right unless road markings indicate otherwise; but keep moving if the way is clear.

Prose fiction
Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta.


Use

redbtn The term ‘style’ is usually used in a positive sense to praise what are seen as good qualities.

redbtn Even bad style may be identifiable – if it is consistent.

redbtn Good style is often easy to recognise, but quite difficult to analyse.

redbtn It may be used and perceived – unconsciously.

redbtn NB! We all use a variety of language styles every day, especially in speech.

redbtn One very important feature of good style is that it must be entirely appropriate for the task it is performing.

redbtn This means that the author must take into account [even if unconsciously!] audience, form, and function.

redbtn Style might be good, yet hardly noticeable – because it is concentrated on effective communication. This is sometimes known as ‘transparent’ good style.

redbtn The first of the examples above is from The Highway Code.

When approaching a roundabout, watch out for traffic already on it. Take special care to look out for cyclists or motorcyclists ahead or to the side. Give way to traffic on your right unless road markings indicate otherwise; but keep moving if the way is clear.

redbtn This is writing which is makes its points as simply and as clearly as possible. The vocabulary is that of everyday life, and in manner it is speaking to a general reader without trying to make an impression or draw attention to itself in any way.

redbtn This writing is entirely free of literary effects or decoration.

redbtn In most writing however, ‘good style’ is normally associated with verbal inventiveness and clever manipulation of the elements of literary language.

redbtn The second example is from Vladimir Nabokov’s famous novel Lolita:

Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta.

redbtn This is writing which is deliberately setting out to be impressive. It relies very heavily on decoration and ornament.

redbtn In this extract Nabokov uses lots of alliteration – the repetition of the ‘l’ and ‘t’ sounds, metaphor – ‘light’ and ‘fire’ – and onomatopoeia – ‘trip’, ‘tap’ – as well as such fancy wordplay as the orthographic and semantic parallels between ‘life’ and ‘fire’.

redbtn Good style in speech and writing – like that in clothes or other matters involving taste – can go in and out of fashion.

redbtn Style in context. Style, in any kind of speech or writing, is extremely important to the overall function of communication. In most cases, a consistency of features produces what we understand as a pleasing style. That is, the style is appropriate to the context in which it occurs.

redbtn A discordant style is produced by the inclusion of some feature which does not fit with the stylistic context of the piece. In other words, the feature is out of place.

redbtn An example of this might be found in a personal letter which is signed ‘Yours faithfully’ or an aristocratic character in a novel speaking street slang for no good stylistic reason.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Figurative writing, Language, Style, Writing

Stylistic analysis – how to do it

September 13, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Stylistic analysis – definition

stylistic analysis Stylistic analysis in linguistics refers to the identification of patterns of usage in speech and writing.

redbtn Stylistic analysis in literary studies is usually made for the purpose of commenting on quality and meaning in a text.


Examples

redbtn A stylistic analysis of a roadsign which reads NO LEFT TURN might make the following observations.

  • The statement is a command.
  • It is cast in the imperative mode.
  • The statement lacks a subject and a verb.
  • These are implied [THERE IS].
  • The statement is unpunctuated.
  • Capitals have been used for emphasis.
  • Simple vocabulary to suit wide audience.
  • Extreme compression for rapid comprehension.
  • Form entirely suited to audience and function.

Use

redbtn In linguistics the purpose of close analysis is to identify and classify the elements of language being used.

redbtn In literary studies the purpose is usually an adjunct to understanding, exegesis, and interpretation.

redbtn In both cases, an extremely detailed and scrupulous attention is paid to the text.

redbtn This process may now be aided by computer programs which able to analyse texts.

redbtn NB! At this point, the study of language moves into either ‘stylistics’ or ‘literary studies’.

redbtn Stylistic analysis is a normal part of literary studies. It is practised as a part of understanding the possible meanings in a text.

redbtn It is also generally assumed that the process of analysis will reveal the good qualities of the writing.

redbtn Take for example the opening lines of Shakespeare’s Richard III:

Now is the winter of our discontent
Made glorious summer by this sun of York;

redbtn A stylistic analysis might reveal the following points:

  • the play is written in poetic blank verse
  • that is — unrhymed, iambic pentameters
  • the stresses fall as follows
  • Now /i/s the w/i/nter /o/f our d/i/scont/e/nt
  • [notice that the stress falls on vowel sounds]
  • the first line is built on a metaphor
  • the condition of England is described in terms of the season ‘winter’
  • the term ‘our’ is a form of the royal ‘we’
  • the seasonal metaphor is extended into the second line …
  • … where better conditions become ‘summer’
  • the metaphor is extended even further by the term ‘sun’
  • it is the sun which appears, ‘causing’ the summer
  • but ‘sun’ is here also a pun – on the term ‘son’…
  • … which refers to the son of the King
  • ‘York’ is a metonymic reference to the Duke of York

redbtn In a complete analysis, the significance of these sylistic details would be related to the events of the play itself, and to Shakespeare’s presentation of them.

redbtn In some forms of sylistic analysis, the numerical recurrence of certain stylistic features is used to make judgements about the nature and the quality of the writing.

redbtn However, it is important to recognise that the concept of style is much broader than just the ‘good style’ of literary prose.

redbtn For instance, even casual communication such as a manner of speaking or a personal letter might have an individual style.

redbtn However, to give a detailed account of this style requires the same degree of linguistic analysis as literary texts.

redbtn Stylistic analysis of a non-literary text for instance means studying in detail the features of a passage from such genres as:

Instruction notes for programming your video-recorder
Information a history text book
Persuasion an advertisement or a holiday brochure

redbtn The method of analysis can be seen as looking at the text in great detail, observing what the parts are, and saying what function they perform in the context of the passage.

redbtn It is rather like taking a car-engine to pieces, looking at each component in detail, then observing its function as the whole engine starts working.

redbtn These are features which are likely to occur in a text whose function is to instruct:

imperative or
command
‘remove the outer covering’
direct address ‘check voltage system before you install the unit’
numbered points [because sequencing is important in carrying out a procedure]
technical terms
or jargon
‘piston’, ‘carburettor’, ‘spark plug’
diagram with
call-out labels
[an extra level of communication to aid understanding]

redbtn Features are dealt with in three stages, as follows:

identify — describe — explain

redbtn The features chosen from any text will be those which characterise the piece as to its function. They will be used by the analyst to prove the initial statement which is made about the linguistic nature of the text as a whole.

redbtn This method puports to be fairly scientific. A hypothesis is stated and then proved. It is a useful discipline which encourages logical thought and can be transferred to many other areas of academic study.

redbtn This is one reason why the discipline of stylistic analysis is so useful: it can be applied to a variety of subjects.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Language, Literature, Stylistic analysis, Writing

Symbols – how to understand them

September 14, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Symbols – definition

symbols A symbol is an object which stands for something else.

redbtn In language it is a reference in speech or in writing which is made to stand for ideas, feelings, events, or conditions.

redbtn A symbol is usually something tangible or concrete which evokes something abstract.


Examples

redbtn The following are standard symbols in the context of English culture.

  • The rose often stands for love.
  • The colour red stands for passion.
  • The dove stands for peace.
  • The ace of spades stands for death.
  • The cross stands for Christianity.

Use

redbtn All cultures use symbols which are actual, tangible objects — such as the cross in a Christian church, the Union Jack flag in the UK, or the Statue of Liberty in the USA.

redbtn These standard symbols and others more original are evoked by conscious and deliberate use of language by writers, advertisers and speakers.

redbtn NB! Symbols are evoked or depicted by language. The very language which evokes the symbol is itself a code or symbol!

redbtn Symbols in the context of language use are sometimes created by the use of words such as ‘cross’ or ‘rose’ or ‘blood’.

redbtn The rose has been used so often in connection with love that it has become a symbol of it.

redbtn But the human heart is also used as a symbol for love – so there can be more than one symbol for the same thing.

redbtn Fire is often used as a symbol, both for danger and for human passion — so a single word or object can sometimes symbolise more than one thing.

redbtn The moon is sometimes used as a symbol for the female — because both have a ‘monthly cycle’.

redbtn In literature, a writer such as D.H. Lawrence exploits this symbolic connction by using images of the moon to stand for female sexuality.

redbtn Even when the word ‘moon’ itself is not used explicitly in his work, any pale nocturnal light can have the same symbolic effect in suggesting the female and her sexual nature.

redbtn In a novel, poem, short story or play, symbols are often introduced at the beginning and then developed and sustained throughout the work by means of various literary techniques.

redbtn Sometimes a symbol is created only for the duration of the work in which it is used. This is called ‘context-bound’ — because it does not have symbolic value outside the work.

redbtn For instance, the handkerchief in Shakespeare’s Othello is used as the symbol of Othello’s mistrust of Desdemona, his wife. [This is because it has come into the possession of his ‘rival’, Iago.] The material, tangible object stands for the emotion jealousy, bringing it into dramatic relief for the audience.
redbtn A handkerchief could be used as a completely different symbol in another piece of work.

redbtn Symbols are used very commonly in daily life. Many road signs are symbols, as is the traditional red and white pole for a barber’s shop.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Language, Semiotics, Symbols

Synecdoche – how to understand it

September 14, 2009 by Roy Johnson

free pages from our English Language software program

Synecdoche – definition

synecdoche Synecdoche is a figure of speech in which a part of something is substituted for the whole thing.

redbtn The part chosen is usually important or essential, and thus the whole (although implied) is easily recognised or understood.


Examples

In the expression ‘United won the match’, the term ‘United’ stands for ‘Manchester United Football Club’ [or Leeds, or some other team].

In the expression ‘Give us this day our daily bread’ the term ‘bread’ stands for the meals eaten each day.


Use

redbtn Synecdoche [pronounced sin-eck-doh-key, by the way] is part of everyday speech. It is usually used quite unconsciously.

redbtn It is often used in imaginative writing such as fiction and poetry to clarify and enhance an image.

redbtn NB! If you can’t remember the difference between synecdoche and metonymy – don’t worry. You’re not alone.

redbtn In the expression ‘All hands on deck!’, the term ‘hands’ stands for ‘mariners’.

redbtn The term ‘hand’ has been chosen to represent the whole expression ‘able-bodied seaman’ [or in PC (politically correct) terms ‘sea-person’] because that is the most important feature required for work on deck.

redbtn In the expression ‘United won the match’, the term ‘United’ (in the case of Manchester United Football Club) might not appear to be the most important or essential item to represent the whole.

redbtn However, Manchester has two football teams — the other being Manchester City Football Club. A supporter of MUFC would therefore be selecting the one important lingustic feature which distinguished his team from the other fotball club.

redbtn The parts of the name ‘Manchester’ and ‘Football Club’ would be implied by the speaker, and understood by the listener.

redbtn Similarly, a supporter of Manchester City Football Club would say ‘City won the match’.

Self-assessment quiz follows >>>

© Roy Johnson 2004


English Language 3.0 program
Books on language
More on grammar


Filed Under: English Language Tagged With: English language, Figures of speech, Language, Synechdoche

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • …
  • 22
  • Next Page »

Get in touch

info@mantex.co.uk

Content © Mantex 2016
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Clients
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Links
  • Services
  • Reviews
  • Sitemap
  • T & C’s
  • Testimonials
  • Privacy

Copyright © 2025 · Mantex

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in