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 Ling 131: Language & Style
 

 Topic 6 (session A) - Style and Style variation > Style: what is it? > Task F > Our Answer

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Session Overview
Style Variation in USA
Language Variation: Dialect
Language Variation: Register
Style Variation in a poem
Reregistration
Style: What is it?
Authorial and text style
Style Variation Checksheet
Topic 6 'tool' summary
 
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Style: what is it?

Our Answer To task F

The consistent graphological style oddity is that every word begins with a capital letter. This suggests that each word in the sentence has to be pronounced in a way that gives them high, and equal importance.

This leads us to imagine someone speaking (a) more slowly than usual, (b) louder than usual, (c) using a primary stress for each word, no matter what its lexical/grammatical status (and perhaps even a seperate intonation unit for each word?) and (d) with lengthened pronunciation of the words or even slight pauses between the words.

 

Authorial Style and Text Style

This last task does not just show us that graphetic and phonetic choices can be style features. It also shows us that in a text the same feature can, in principle, be a marker of style, and have particular meaning effects at one an the same time. By characterising Mr Podsnap's speaking style in theway that he does, Dickens also makes fun of him. Like so many Englishmen, apparantly, Mr Podsnap assumes that everyone else should speak his language, and his only contribution to international cooperation is to speak English loudly and slowly. Learning to speak another language is clearly not for him! The aspects of language choice which contribute to textual meaning and effect are sometimes called text style. Clearly it will be possible for the same feature to contribute to (a) authorial style and (b) text style at the same time.

Now that we have explored the notion of style in general terms, we will go on to compare in detail three short extracts which are typical of three different well-known novelists.

 


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