As a French learner, I had an experience similar to your Se7en experience: dialog in TV shows and movies was (and is) much more difficult for me to understand than, say, a professor’s lecture.
Martin, congratulations for this awesome job you've done on variation. I show it to my students in Brazil. It works very well for discussing the variation subject in English classes.
THANK YOU so much Teacher Martin !! i'm from Ecuador and I really liked this video, i'm studying about this topic in my university and its very interesting..
Excellent video! Just to add my two cents, even by Australian pronunciation standards, Julia Gillard's accent is a little unusual. There aren't too many Australians who speak exactly like that.
Dear Martin, being a language lover myself I paid attention to your crystal clear pronunciation and noted your specific pronunciation of "variation" and "variable" /æ/ differing from the American standard /e/ and thought you might like to polish it up. Or not. Respectfully! :-)
I believe the example of the Malaysian English here is a variant of Indian-Malaysian English. I had difficulty to guess where he came from, I thought he was from Indonesia or some African country because of the /t/ sound. The Malaysian-English I'm familiar with are Chinese- and Malay-English variants, from what I know, they do not pronounce /r/ that way. The speaker also doesn't use typical Malaysian-English words like 'lah', 'ah', etc.
Hiiiii .... Could you please tell me the sentence " where are u going" and its variants are lexical/linguistic variables or syntactic variable ? And the 2nd question is that is this variable " where are you going" is dependent or independent variable?
If your question concerns the variation between "you" and "u" in "Where are you/u going", then the choice between "you" and "u" is the dependent variable. That means you have a research design that tries to explain why people use one or the other. Independent variables that drive the choice would include age, gender, the context in which the forms are written, etc. OK, now is the choice lexical or syntactic? I'd say it's neither, it is orthographic. Lexical variation would be something like "That's inaccurate" vs. "That's bulls**t", syntactic variation would be "It's cool to be three years old" vs. "It's cool being three years old".
@@MartinHilpert ooohhh thanku sooo much..you are so kind. I wasn't expecting a reply soo quickly once again Thanku soo much... Can I ask one more question?? Ok by considering your "yes". here is my question 😀 If we take an interrogative sentence as a variable and in its variant forms the meaning remain same but form varies so will it be lexical variation?? And will it be dependent variable which will depend on region , age and education level?
English should return healthy to anglophone world, english is losing his consistence, substance, inner center , many varieties, pidgins and kryols derivated from english. Its sick global situation for this idiom in the deepest truth. Nice well vídeo. 🤙🤙🤙🤙
Glad, I came across your video.Categorical explanation of variation in language.
Prescriptive - formal/correct way of using language
Descriptive - use of language in different ways
As a French learner, I had an experience similar to your Se7en experience: dialog in TV shows and movies was (and is) much more difficult for me to understand than, say, a professor’s lecture.
wonderfully explained language variation
Martin, congratulations for this awesome job you've done on variation. I show it to my students in Brazil. It works very well for discussing the variation subject in English classes.
Such a great series, Sir. Keep it up!
Very informative session
THANK YOU so much Teacher Martin !! i'm from Ecuador and I really liked this video, i'm studying about this topic in my university and its very interesting..
I wish someday you will hold streaming Prof. Nice video and thanks a lot
Your videos are indeed very informative and interesting. Thanks so much for sharing them.
Man... I enjoy your videos... The content is great.. Am a first year student in Linguistics in SA
Such a great session. Thank you
Such a great series good work on language variations
I hope you will do a course in grammar from starting point.
Thank you sir.
Excellent video! Just to add my two cents, even by Australian pronunciation standards, Julia Gillard's accent is a little unusual. There aren't too many Australians who speak exactly like that.
It is really very informative presentation about Englishes spoken in the world
Regarding Syntactic variation. Is the use of Do support a construct of Malaysian english or a result of the mental translations from Malay?
You mean if "is not come" is the result of transfer from Malay? I honestly don't know, but perhaps someone else here does. Please comment below!
Concept of Englishes aptly taken up and explained.
Cool video! I had trouble going to sleep - not anymore! Thanks!👍
Dear Martin, being a language lover myself I paid attention to your crystal clear pronunciation and noted your specific pronunciation of "variation" and "variable" /æ/ differing from the American standard /e/ and thought you might like to polish it up. Or not. Respectfully! :-)
Thank you sir. I'm from Indonesia. This very helpful on my course in university.
Thank you Martin.
Can you make a video about the ecology in linguistics
Very good explanation &Teaching aids.
How do l get the last video - the introductory course?
Great video! I’m researching linguistic variation and this is very helpful!
Absolutely amazing
Thanks for sharing part of the book
Very interesting discussions
Very nice informative.....
I believe the example of the Malaysian English here is a variant of Indian-Malaysian English. I had difficulty to guess where he came from, I thought he was from Indonesia or some African country because of the /t/ sound. The Malaysian-English I'm familiar with are Chinese- and Malay-English variants, from what I know, they do not pronounce /r/ that way. The speaker also doesn't use typical Malaysian-English words like 'lah', 'ah', etc.
Hi professor.. I bought the book your shown in the video (By Edgar Schneider) and it has just arrived. More hint will be welcome
Good session.
Thank you so much Martin, this so helpful.
Great 👍🌹
Bravo, it helped me a lot!
Thanks Sir for your excellent presentation. Very much informative. 🙏
Such a great session thank u
Loved this explanation, thanks
Such a great ideas sir.
Very nice
Good video
Nice presentation.
Good video lecture.
Useful information about Language variation
-Dr Virenkumar Pandya
BDK ARTS AND COMMERCE COLLEGE GADHADA
So great sir your subject.
Lots of new things are there as for as the language variations is concerned
Great video
nice session
Can you also say these levels are the types?
amazing sir
Thanks teacher Martin
Hi sir watching this because it's one of our topics
This video is great.
Can you give me a definition of language variation!?
Thank you very much
Thank you very much sir
Really valuable
Thanks indeed, You helped me a lot
Wow! 🤩
nice video
Hiiiii .... Could you please tell me the sentence " where are u going" and its variants are lexical/linguistic variables or syntactic variable ?
And the 2nd question is that is this variable " where are you going" is dependent or independent variable?
If your question concerns the variation between "you" and "u" in "Where are you/u going", then the choice between "you" and "u" is the dependent variable. That means you have a research design that tries to explain why people use one or the other. Independent variables that drive the choice would include age, gender, the context in which the forms are written, etc. OK, now is the choice lexical or syntactic? I'd say it's neither, it is orthographic. Lexical variation would be something like "That's inaccurate" vs. "That's bulls**t", syntactic variation would be "It's cool to be three years old" vs. "It's cool being three years old".
@@MartinHilpert ooohhh thanku sooo much..you are so kind. I wasn't expecting a reply soo quickly once again Thanku soo much...
Can I ask one more question??
Ok by considering your "yes". here is my question 😀
If we take an interrogative sentence as a variable and in its variant forms the meaning remain same but form varies so will it be lexical variation?? And will it be dependent variable which will depend on region , age and education level?
Nice
Great
5:41
Great sessiin
Thank u
Thanks
Thanks sir
Effective
thank you
Okay
good morning
Goo
Hay klsmyt
allah çarpsın bi şey anladıysam
English should return healthy to anglophone world, english is losing his consistence, substance, inner center , many varieties, pidgins and kryols derivated from english.
Its sick global situation for this idiom in the deepest truth.
Nice well vídeo. 🤙🤙🤙🤙
The disparaging God joke was insensitive, unnecessary and unprofessional. It shows that you have a lack of respect for other’s worldviews
Great video
Can you make a video about the ecology in linguistics
Nice video
Thanks
Effective