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dialect |
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dialectVariation of a spoken language shared by those in a particular area or a particular social or ethnic group. The term is used to indicate a geographical area (‘northern dialects’ or ‘Brooklyn dialect’) or social or ethnic group (‘African-American dialect’). Geographically, dialects are the result of settlement history. As populations spread over the land, some communities will have been separated by mountain ranges and rivers. In communities between which communication is difficult, differences in dialect can develop. The study of linguistic geography shows that the distribution of dialects is strongly associated with the topography of the landscape; dialect maps can in fact be drawn to identify areas that share certain linguistic features. Social factors also strongly influence dialect; the way one speaks depends on family, background, occupation, level of education, and so on.
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It covers normal speech sound articulation, normal phonological development, factors related to the presence of phonological disorders, the assessment and remediation of phonological disorders, phonology as it relates to language and dialectal variations and phonological awareness. A painting of a hillside landscape reflects an almost dialectal relation between the lone figure therein and the profusion of nature that surrounds him: Either the bushes and blooms are diminishing the figure, or they are mere contingency, the manifestation of his own imagination. Otherwise, for example, the Qur'an would not originally have been revealed in Arabic with dialectal and foreign lexicographical influence. |
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