It is quite commonplace for bilingual speakers to use two or more languages, dialects or varieties in the same conversation, without any apparent effort. The phenomenon, known as code-switching, has become a major focus of attention in linguistics. This concise and original study explores how, when
Code Switching
β Scribed by Audrey Nelson, Ph.D.; Claire Damken Brown, Ph.D.
- Publisher
- DK Publishing
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Mars and Venus head to work...
Day-to-day, face-to-face workplace communication between men and women is often dysfunctional because each gender employs different speech patterns. When careers and paychecks are on the line, clear communication is crucial - from the mailroom to the boardroom. Code Switching explains what to say, how to say it, how to be taken seriously, and how to act while speaking with the opposite sex for maximum effectiveness in the workplace. Included are:
?How men and women manage conversation, and the value of 'chitchat' prior to a meeting.
?How men use language to impart information and women use language to build or indicate relationship.
?How men use e-mail to emphasize control while women use it to share and build rapport.
?How women can use language to build their credibility.
?How humor is used as a power play, to build territory, or to exclude others.
?How gender talk creates and shapes work relationships.
β¦ Subjects
Business; Nonfiction; BUS000000
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<p>With emphasis on teacher and learner code-switching patterns, this book is one of the first studies to comprehensively address these issues in English as a Foreign Language (EFL) classrooms. The author examines teacher and learner code-switching through quantitative analysis, discourse analysis,