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- Matched-guise_test abstract "The Matched-Guise Test is a sociolinguistic experimental technique used to determine the true feelings of an individual or community towards a specific language, dialect, or accent. This experiment was first introduced by Wallace Lambert and his colleagues at McGill University in 1960s to determine attitudes held by bilingual French Canadians towards English and French (Davies & Elder 2004:189, Agheyisi & Fishman, 1970). In this technique experimental candidates listening to apparently different speakers representing guises in two or more languages and evaluating those speakers across various traits including body height, good looks, leadership, sense of humor, intelligence, religiousness, self-confidence, dependability, kindness, ambition, sociability, character, and likability (Stefanowitsch 2005). Without the knowledge of the informant (the listener of guises), the speaker is actually a bilingual or polyglot and the reactions elicited by each of his/her linguistic guises are compared not as individual’s guises but as actual speech of an individual.Since the initial aim of these studies range from the influence of linguistic attitudes on educational and political systems to their influence on workplace environments, Lambert’s technique has proven successful in identifying and eliciting certain stereotypes toward particular social groups. The matched-guise technique has been widely used in bicultural settings such as in Quebec, as well as in cross-cultural studies and multi-ethnic societies, and it has been employed not only as an instrument in comparing attitudes toward languages, but also toward variations in dialects and accents. And depending on particular listener, a speaker’s accent, speech patterns, vocabulary, intonation, etc., can all serve as markers for evaluating speaker’s appearance, personality, social status, and character. Among other things, listeners also possess language attitudes, which they use to evaluate the speakers whom they are hearing.".
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageID "5506770".
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageLength "8710".
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageRevisionID "670696307".
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Accent_(sociolinguistics).
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sociolinguistics.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Content_word.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Diglossia.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Education.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink First_language.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Formal_register.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink French_Canadians.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Informal_register.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Informant_(linguistics).
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Linguistics.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Moral_character.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Morphology_(linguistics).
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Personality_type.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Phonetics.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Politics.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Social_status.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Sociolinguistics.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Stereotype.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Stimulus_material.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Syntax.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLink Wallace_Lambert.
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLinkText "Matched-Guise Test".
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLinkText "Matched-guise test".
- Matched-guise_test wikiPageWikiLinkText "matched-guise".
- Matched-guise_test subject Category:Sociolinguistics.
- Matched-guise_test hypernym Technique.
- Matched-guise_test type TopicalConcept.
- Matched-guise_test comment "The Matched-Guise Test is a sociolinguistic experimental technique used to determine the true feelings of an individual or community towards a specific language, dialect, or accent. This experiment was first introduced by Wallace Lambert and his colleagues at McGill University in 1960s to determine attitudes held by bilingual French Canadians towards English and French (Davies & Elder 2004:189, Agheyisi & Fishman, 1970).".
- Matched-guise_test label "Matched-guise test".
- Matched-guise_test sameAs Q6786250.
- Matched-guise_test sameAs m.0dpz67.
- Matched-guise_test sameAs Q6786250.
- Matched-guise_test wasDerivedFrom Matched-guise_test?oldid=670696307.
- Matched-guise_test isPrimaryTopicOf Matched-guise_test.