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Style Variation Checksheet
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A. Dialect
- What dialect is the text in? Does it vary from standard written English?
If so, what is the purpose of this deviation from the norm for written
English?
- What linguistic features (e.g. vocabulary, grammar, spelling) indicate
the dialect?
- Is there any variation in the text with respect to dialect (for example,
do any characters speak in a variety different from the 'default dialect'
for the text?)? If so, what effect does this variation produce in terms
of interpretation or reader attitude?
B. Other variation (according to subject matter, function, tenor or
medium)
- What linguistic variety does the text you are examining use as its
basic style? Is it an unusual one for the literary genre that the text
comes from? If so, what effect does this have?
- What are the linguistic features (e.g. vocabulary, grammar, spelling)
which indicate the variety (or varieties)?
- Are there any parts of the text which have features associated with
a different language variety? If so, what are the linguistic features
which indicate the change? What consequences does this style variation
have for the interpretation of the text as a whole?
NOTE: This checksheet is specifically devoted to helping you to spot
variations in style. If you want a more detailed checksheet relevant to
the more general subject of authorial and text style, you can find one
in Topic 10, where it is called 'Methodology
checksheet' because we have developed it there in relation to the
methodologies needed to analyse prose style/texts in general.
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