Linguistic or verbal repertoire is ‘
the set of language varieties used in the speaking and writing practices of a speech community’
(Finegan 2004, glossary). In other words, the linguistic repertoire of a speech community includes all the linguistic varieties (registers, dialects, styles, accents, etc.)
What is meant by language repertoire?
The linguistic repertoire is
the set of skills and knowledge a person has of one or more languages, as well as their different varieties
(be they diatopic, diaphasic, diastratic or diachronic). … Therefore, the learner’s linguistic repertoire is the base upon which their learning can progress.
What is verbal repertoire?
Verbal repertoire is
a compound of all dialects, languages, language forms and language variants in a speech community
What is a communicative repertoire?
In revisiting Gumperz’s (1964) notion of linguistic repertoire, Betsy Rymes (2010a, 2014) coined the term communicative repertoire
to capture how individuals use language and literacy, and other semiotic means of communication including gestures, body language, and dress to function effectively in multiple communities
.
What is domains of language use?
Recall the five domains of language:
phonology, mor- phology, syntax, semantics, and discourse (pragmatics)
.
What is Translanguaging pedagogy?
Translanguaging pedagogy is about you and your students.
It draws on the languages you have available to your group
– so even if you don’t speak all (or any) of the other languages your students do, you can welcome them and encourage the learners to use them in the classroom.
What is meant by Diglossia?
Diglossia, the
coexistence of two varieties of the same language throughout a speech community
. Often, one form is the literary or prestige dialect, and the other is a common dialect spoken by most of the population.
Who is a repertoire person?
Repertoire is
all the skills or remembered performances of a particular person
. An example of repertoire is someone knowing all the songs to Grease, Les Miserables and Cabaret. An example of repertoire is the range of knots that a sailor can tie. noun.
What are linguistic repertoire and styles?
1. All of the linguistic varieties, including registers, dialects, styles, and accents, that
exist in a community or within an individual
.
What are communicative resources?
A communications resource is
a physical or logical device that provides a single bidirectional, asynchronous data stream
. … For each communications resource, there is a service provider, consisting of a library or driver, that enables applications to access the resource.
What are the 4 language domains?
The four domains of ELD are:
Listening, speaking, reading, and writing
.
What are the 5 areas of language?
Linguists have identified five basic components (
phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics
) found across languages.
What are the five language domains?
Spoken language, written language, and their associated components (i.e., receptive and expressive) are each a synergistic system comprised of individual language domains (i.e.,
phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics
) that form a dynamic integrative whole (Berko Gleason, 2005).
What are the four purposes of translanguaging pedagogy?
They focus on four primary purposes for translanguaging that work together toward the larger purpose of advancing social justice:
Supporting students as they engage with and comprehend complex content and text
.
Providing opportunities for students to develop linguistic practices for academic contexts
.
Is translanguaging a pedagogical practice?
Pedagogical translanguaging has
the multilingual speaker
and his/her whole multilingual repertoire as its basis. Some strategies can be used across languages while others can be new for the speakers. The idea is to maximize the learner’s linguistic resources when learning English, academic content or other languages.