1:00
en
CR
Ethnicity
14
covert : A prestige dialect perceived by the dominant culture group as being inferior.
patois : A word that refers to Jamaican Creole in particular.
mesolect : The varieties in between a Acrolect and Basilect.
acrolect : The most socially prestigious variety that is closest to its lexifier language.
suefox : A theorist who analysed 'Multicultural London English'.
hinglish : A Creole form used in many Indian schools.
britishblackenglish : A non standard dialect with its roots in Creole and closely associated with Black youth culture.
codeswitching : An individual speaking in a particular code on different occasions.
creole : A language form developed from a Pidgin.
decreolisation : The process of a Creole converging towards its lexifier language.
sebba : Mark _ _ _ _ _ studied the language variety London Jamaican.
jafaican : A term that refers to the mimicking of black-origin language forms by white speakers.
codemixing : A speaker switches between languages within utterances.
basilect : The least socially prestigious variety which has the least in common with its lexifier language.
pidgin : A simplified language form created as a result of language contact.
Ethnicity
Across:2. | A prestige dialect perceived by the dominant culture group as being inferior. | 5. | The least socially prestigious variety which has the least in common with its lexifier language. | 10. | A simplified language form created as a result of language contact. |
| 11. | A Creole form used in many Indian schools. | 12. | An individual speaking in a particular code on different occasions. | 13. | The most socially prestigious variety that is closest to its lexifier language. |
| | Down:1. | A non standard dialect with its roots in Creole and closely associated with Black youth culture. | 2. | A language form developed from a Pidgin. | 3. | The varieties in between a Acrolect and Basilect. | 4. | The process of a Creole converging towards its lexifier language. |
| 6. | Mark _ _ _ _ _ studied the language variety London Jamaican. | 7. | A term that refers to the mimicking of black-origin language forms by white speakers. | 8. | A word that refers to Jamaican Creole in particular. | 9. | A theorist who analysed 'Multicultural London English'. |
| |
© 2013
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Ethnicity
Across:2. | A prestige dialect perceived by the dominant culture group as being inferior. | 5. | The least socially prestigious variety which has the least in common with its lexifier language. | 10. | A simplified language form created as a result of language contact. |
| 11. | A Creole form used in many Indian schools. | 12. | An individual speaking in a particular code on different occasions. | 13. | The most socially prestigious variety that is closest to its lexifier language. |
| | Down:1. | A non standard dialect with its roots in Creole and closely associated with Black youth culture. | 2. | A language form developed from a Pidgin. | 3. | The varieties in between a Acrolect and Basilect. | 4. | The process of a Creole converging towards its lexifier language. |
| 6. | Mark _ _ _ _ _ studied the language variety London Jamaican. | 7. | A term that refers to the mimicking of black-origin language forms by white speakers. | 8. | A word that refers to Jamaican Creole in particular. | 9. | A theorist who analysed 'Multicultural London English'. |
| |
© 2013
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only