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Mounce574 wrote:A question I would have for linguists is how do they know they are right in their interpretation of language?Well, unless you are a trained in the science of linguistics, or at least and avid lay reader of linguistics journals, you wouldn't have much of an idea whether they were right or not. But that's ok, we can't be abreast of all of science and so, in lots of things, we have to trust the experts. Some will have opinions, but lay people who are interested in the facts, or, at least, what is more likely to be true than Joe Blog's opinion, will do best to listen to the experts. To linguists.
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑May 26th, 2024, 8:30 amMutual intelligibility has been shown to correlate well with counts of cognates on standardized word lists. It is the most often used, the most useful and the only really practical distinction between the concepts of "dialect" and "language".Nah, Scottish is a whole other language ;)
A dictionary wrote: The word language describes a body of words and the systems we apply to those words, such as grammar and spelling, in order to communicate with each other. A language includes the spoken, written, and signed forms of the words and systems. Some examples of languages include English, Spanish, Arabic, Japanese, and Hindi.American is a spoken and written derivative of English...?
The word dialect describes a particular variety of a language. A dialect often follows most of the rules of its respective language, but it may have different vocabulary, grammar, or pronunciations. Most dialects are recognized by their usage in a specific geographic area, but dialects may be determined by other criteria such as social class. Some examples of dialects include Australian English, Chilean Spanish, Egyptian Arabic, and Jamaican Patois.
The word language is more general, while the word dialect is used to refer specifically to a particular variant of one language. Additionally, a language includes the written form of communication, while the word dialect is often used specifically to refer only to a spoken variety of a language. The many dialects of English, for example, all use the same Latin alphabet but will often sound very different from each other when spoken aloud.
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