Matthew Hunt, Colleen Cotter, Hazel Pearson, Linnaea Stockall
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Experiment 2 is a matched-guise task in which listeners heard a passage featuring a mix of swearwords and neutral “-ing” words in one of four conditions: fully velar (<i>All-ing</i>), fully alveolar (<i>All-in</i>), only swearwords as velar (<i>Swear-ing</i>), or only neutral words as velar (<i>Swear-in</i>). Participants rated speakers on Likert scales (Schleef et al. (2017), Regional diversity in social perceptions of (ING). <i>Language Variation and Change</i>, 29(1), 29–56). Participants again displayed a tendency towards hearing “-ing” on swearwords. As a result, responses to the <i>Swear-in</i> guises were similar to those for the <i>All-ing</i> guises. The consequences for our understanding of swearing, sociolinguistic perception and cognition, and style, are discussed.</p>","PeriodicalId":51486,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Sociolinguistics","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/josl.12588","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Swear(ING) ain't play(ING): The interaction of taboo language and the sociolinguistic variable\",\"authors\":\"Matthew Hunt, Colleen Cotter, Hazel Pearson, Linnaea Stockall\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/josl.12588\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Swearwords influence social evaluation of a speaker in a variety of ways depending on social context (Jay & Janschewitz (2008), The pragmatics of swearing. <i>Journal of Politeness Research. Language, Behaviour, Culture</i>, 4(2), 267–288). Little attention has been paid to the role of linguistic variation in social perceptions of swearing, however. This paper presents two experiments that test the role of sociolinguistic variation in the social evaluation of swearing. Experiment 1 is a variant categorization task, in which participants categorized acoustically ambiguous swearwords and phonetically matching neutral and nonwords as ending in either “-ing” or “-in.” Results suggest that swearwords led participants to hear “-ing” on ambiguous items. Experiment 2 is a matched-guise task in which listeners heard a passage featuring a mix of swearwords and neutral “-ing” words in one of four conditions: fully velar (<i>All-ing</i>), fully alveolar (<i>All-in</i>), only swearwords as velar (<i>Swear-ing</i>), or only neutral words as velar (<i>Swear-in</i>). Participants rated speakers on Likert scales (Schleef et al. (2017), Regional diversity in social perceptions of (ING). <i>Language Variation and Change</i>, 29(1), 29–56). Participants again displayed a tendency towards hearing “-ing” on swearwords. As a result, responses to the <i>Swear-in</i> guises were similar to those for the <i>All-ing</i> guises. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
根据社会背景,脏话会以多种方式影响说话者的社会评价(Jay &Janschewitz(2008),“咒骂的语用学”。礼貌研究杂志。语言,行为,文化,4(2),267-288。然而,很少有人关注语言差异在社会对咒骂的认知中所起的作用。本文提出了两个实验来测试社会语言学变异在咒骂的社会评价中的作用。实验1是一个不同的分类任务,在这个任务中,参与者将声音上模糊的脏话和语音上匹配的中性词和非词分类为以“-ing”或“-in”结尾的词。结果表明,脏话会让参与者在模棱两可的项目上听到“-ing”。实验二是一个配对伪装任务,在这个任务中,听者听到了一段混合了脏话和中性“-ing”词的文章,在四种情况下:完全的velar (All-ing),完全的肺泡(All-in),只有脏话velar (swear),或者只有中性的velar (Swear-in)。参与者根据李克特量表(Schleef et al.(2017),社会认知的区域多样性(ING)对演讲者进行评分。语言变异与变化,29(1),29 - 56。参与者再次表现出听到脏话时“-ing”的倾向。结果,人们对宣誓就职系列的反应与对所有系列的反应相似。讨论了我们对咒骂的理解、社会语言学感知和认知以及风格的影响。
Swear(ING) ain't play(ING): The interaction of taboo language and the sociolinguistic variable
Swearwords influence social evaluation of a speaker in a variety of ways depending on social context (Jay & Janschewitz (2008), The pragmatics of swearing. Journal of Politeness Research. Language, Behaviour, Culture, 4(2), 267–288). Little attention has been paid to the role of linguistic variation in social perceptions of swearing, however. This paper presents two experiments that test the role of sociolinguistic variation in the social evaluation of swearing. Experiment 1 is a variant categorization task, in which participants categorized acoustically ambiguous swearwords and phonetically matching neutral and nonwords as ending in either “-ing” or “-in.” Results suggest that swearwords led participants to hear “-ing” on ambiguous items. Experiment 2 is a matched-guise task in which listeners heard a passage featuring a mix of swearwords and neutral “-ing” words in one of four conditions: fully velar (All-ing), fully alveolar (All-in), only swearwords as velar (Swear-ing), or only neutral words as velar (Swear-in). Participants rated speakers on Likert scales (Schleef et al. (2017), Regional diversity in social perceptions of (ING). Language Variation and Change, 29(1), 29–56). Participants again displayed a tendency towards hearing “-ing” on swearwords. As a result, responses to the Swear-in guises were similar to those for the All-ing guises. The consequences for our understanding of swearing, sociolinguistic perception and cognition, and style, are discussed.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Sociolinguistics promotes sociolinguistics as a thoroughly linguistic and thoroughly social-scientific endeavour. The journal is concerned with language in all its dimensions, macro and micro, as formal features or abstract discourses, as situated talk or written text. Data in published articles represent a wide range of languages, regions and situations - from Alune to Xhosa, from Cameroun to Canada, from bulletin boards to dating ads.