Thanks for offering such lectures. I do enjoy watching them. I have a note, though. Code-switching and code-mixing are two different phenomena. "In code-switching the point at which the languages change corresponds to a point where the situation changes, either on its own or precisely because the language changes. There are other cases, however, where a fluent bilingual talking to another fluent bilingual changes language without any change at all in the situation. This kind of alternation is called code-mixing" (SOCIOLINGUISTICS by R. A. Hudson, 2001: 53).
Your videos are so helpful ...I like the way you explain simplify and give athentic examples for each element in the lesson .....I appreciate it.keep it up
Thank bro but why don't u put sociolinguistics videos in course And i want u to explain language variations I mean dialect jargon rigester standard lang .... etc .
If you have watched the previous video concerning Sociolinguistics. I have made a plan and Your request is yet to come in the upcoming videos. PS: I have already explained dialectology, language variations
Hello Mr , please i need ypur help for something ( Can you please answer this question ? ) "Explain the different reasons why was the kingdom of Wessex left unconquered " please !
You should specify (conquered by whom?) If you are speaking about the Vikings, that is because King Alfred of Wessex defeated them in the battle of Edington and therefore, they made a treaty where the vikings could take the northern part of England.
Pidgin and Creole languages are indeed considered language varieties, but they are also closely associated with the process of language change. Both pidgins and Creoles are examples of language change and evolution. They illustrate how new languages can develop through contact between speakers of different languages and how these new languages can become more complex over time.
Thanks for offering such lectures. I do enjoy watching them.
I have a note, though. Code-switching and code-mixing are two different phenomena. "In code-switching the point at which the languages change corresponds to a point where the situation changes, either on its own or precisely because the language changes. There are other cases, however, where a fluent bilingual talking to another fluent bilingual changes language without any change at all in the situation. This kind of alternation is called code-mixing" (SOCIOLINGUISTICS by R. A. Hudson, 2001: 53).
Your videos are so helpful ...I like the way you explain simplify and give athentic examples for each element in the lesson .....I appreciate it.keep it up
Thank you so much, I appreciate your courses, they are very helpful and easy to understand, keep going
Thanks a lot.please can.you make a video about william labov .A man with great contributions in this field.
Appreciate your information so much, thank you
very clear and informative lecture
You saved my life
At the perfect time. Could you please make videos about traditional grammar and Modern linguistics (structuralism. Functionalism. Generativism )
I did that except functionalism
Thank you sir ❤️
thank u so ; much professor
Excellent 👍👍👍👍
❤️❤️❤️
❤
with much love and respect moving to part 3
Thank you a lot
Thank bro but why don't u put sociolinguistics videos in course
And i want u to explain language variations
I mean dialect jargon rigester standard lang .... etc .
If you have watched the previous video concerning Sociolinguistics. I have made a plan and Your request is yet to come in the upcoming videos.
PS: I have already explained dialectology, language variations
@@HM-English ok thanks a lot bro your videos are very fruiteful keep going please ur follower from Algeria
Can you please make a video about language variations
I already made it before this one here is the link: th-cam.com/video/u2t4I67pyRA/w-d-xo.html
Hello Mr , please i need ypur help for something ( Can you please answer this question ? ) "Explain the different reasons why was the kingdom of Wessex left unconquered " please !
You should specify (conquered by whom?)
If you are speaking about the Vikings, that is because King Alfred of Wessex defeated them in the battle of Edington and therefore, they made a treaty where the vikings could take the northern part of England.
thanks but pidgin & creole are included under lge varieties not lge change
Pidgin and Creole languages are indeed considered language varieties, but they are also closely associated with the process of language change. Both pidgins and Creoles are examples of language change and evolution. They illustrate how new languages can develop through contact between speakers of different languages and how these new languages can become more complex over time.
hi! may I know the sources that you used from this video?
بالتوفيق أخي.
Where are you from
Algeria
@@HM-English whats you job ör title are you linguist