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8 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Social network

The pattern of informal relationships people are involved in on a regular basis.

Network density

Refers to whether people in a persons network are in touch with each other. How well do they know each other and how tight are they independently of you?

Uniplex and mutliplex networks

How many areas we are linked to members in our network in. For example, some people you only go to school with some others you see in multiple settings. The more of these you have, the better your chances will be. Uniplex means one area, multiplex means several.

Community of practice

It's pretty crapily described, but it means social platforms like family, sports teams, drama club, gym members or whatever.

Cockney features

¤H-dropping - I hate -> I ate


¤T-glottaling - Better -> Be'er


¤ Yod coalescence - Well ->Wew


¤ “ɫ”vocalization - Tune->Chune


¤ Thank you -> Fank you




These are the 5 cockney features.

Multicultural London English

Part cockney, part immigrant from Jamaica and Asia (pakistan and india)




¤ They stopped saying WEW


¤ They do less H-dropping


¤ They have the rest of the cockney features.


¤ The K in LIKE is removed


¤ discourse markers and tag questions

Northern Cities Vowel Shift.

Where the brits say BLÅKK, and americans say Blak, the northern cities in the united states have moved towards saying BLÆK

Change from above and change from below

Change from above is above consciousness and is a from the top and down change of language socially. The top changes the lower forms.




Change from below is the opposite, it is subconscious and is when the "lower" social vernaculars change from the bottom up, IE they change the language of the higher forms.