Dialects refers to how words are pronounced. Your demographic location and social class can affect your dialect; how you pronounce and say certain words. I am from Texas and when I speak you can easily hear my southern accent so I identify with other texans. Also, jargon’s that are used can help classify individuals into a category. But I think to answer your question language helps to define individuals easily because when a person speaks it is very easy to detect where they might be from and also in many cases you are able to detect their social status.
Ex: My Fair Lady Rate
Of course it defines our identity. Our languages re the result of an evolution which are different each others. Why don’t we think in terms of ethnicity/races when some others define themselves like that (LAA for example).
That is the proof that our language defines our view of the world which is made (in a big part) by our education at school.
It defines your identity because of your accent (except a few exceptions of people who are abble to speak a 2nd language without any accent).
If we take a baby native from Brazil but who grew up in France. He will have a french accent, and the foreigners will identify him as a french. ” I must say, I’ve never really seen the need for having an ‘identity’ as such because I am first and foremost and individual person.”
I don’t think that the identity is a question of choice. having been raised a certain way with a specific language and references a a specific country is something that one’s doesn’t shoose. We can not like our culture or our country – and so decide to not recognise in it – But in reality, the fact it is very difficult to change it when we are adults – it should take decades to have an absolute knowledge of the new language and the subtilities, and it is almost impossible to forget all your past, the language of your family, the songs that your mother sang to you, the school education, the language you used with you firends at school, where you learned most of the values of your land, etc. etc. it is in us for ever.
The Research paper on Language and Identity
This paper is explaining and assessing the relationships between language and Identity. As the topic is too large to discuss, the paper will be focusing on the language and identity of teenagers. By looking at their characteristics, we will discuss how they build up a kind of identity in different social group by means of language. The paper will also include the argument on how people view the ...
“I don’t think so. I couldn’t imagine a world without different ethnicities. I like variety. I love experiencing different cultures, different viewpoints, different phenotypes, different languages. I like how black people look so clearly different from white people, and all the different races for that matter. Each racial phenotype has its own beauty. If we didn’t have different races, the earth would be as boring as all food tasting the same. It’s thinking that one race is superior than another, or destined to exterminate the others that is alarming.
The United States is a nation of IMMIGRANTS, with the exception of Native Americans, regardless of ethnicity. I personally experience racism on a nearly daily basis. I definitely have been discriminated very few times, but often am I alienated, stereotyped, and stared at by “real” Americans.
Somehow, the White (especially Conservative Republican) popluation look at themselves as “real” Americans. Countless times have I been told to “go back to my own country”, or asked “what is your nationality?”. I don’t know how many times I have been called “Chink”, or gotten the tug-at-the-corners-of-the-eyes gesture. ” Poorer people are exposed to less luxury that can tend to make a person sophisticated, prideful, or appear “snobby”. “