Wednesday, 16 September 2015

Variations of FPA

FPA: Form, Purpose, Audience 


Form: Music review 

Purpose: To review The Weekends new album and hear someone else's opinion on it.  
Audience: People who are intrested in music, the band or want to learn about the music. 

Evidence:

Such moments eclipse Tesfaye’s clever gothic flair and, by extension, are at total odds with the pop packaging of this record. He may have softened his edge, upped the production and pulled in the stars, but The Weeknd remains an outsider.




Form: A recent newspaper article 
Purpose: to inform people of the latest goings on in the case of the Smiler ride at Thorpe Park
Audience:  Some who reads the newspaper or wants to keep up to date with the story.


Form: A magazine article from a fashion/beauty magazine
Purpose: inform readers of the latest trends and celebrity happenings
Audience: people who want to keep up to date with the latest fashion and celebrity trends. 

Evidence:

She might be wearing a floral print, but Peter Copping’s muse at Oscar de la Renta this season is no wallflower. From the lacy cocktail dresses to the breathtaking gowns, get the lowdown on Copping’s latest here.


Purpose: To hear someones opinion on the film and what it is briefly about
Audience: People who are thinking about going to see the film and would like an opinion on what it is like. 


Purpose: To entertain the viewer/listener
Audience: The actor/actress performing the part 


Evidence:
HAZEL (V.O.)
On the one hand, you can sugar coat
- the way they do in movies and
- "Perfect" Hazel and "Perfect" Gus sit on a BENCH
romance novels.
She rests her head on his shoulder.
overlooking an incredible seascape in some foreign country.

Wednesday, 9 September 2015

Social Media Taking Over English Language?



I have recently read the article above which explains how 'text talk' is being used all over social media and therefore is slowly changing the English language. For people who are not aware of these new words and abbreviations it can be very confusing. 

In the article it states that " 86 per cent of all British parents think teenagers speak an entirely different language on social media and mobile messaging." Could this mean that when this younger generation grows older the English language will have completely changed, or will 'text talk' eventually become outdated like the article suggest has already happened with certain phrases. The article also includes a little quiz to test your knowledge on these abbreviations and phrases, some more obvious than others. 

It also speaks about how we are now using a photographic way of communication, mainly emoticons, and claims that maybe in the future these icons will take over the 'text talk' language. 



Frameworks/ Language levels

Frame work/ Linguistic level


Lexis: Word-choice. Meaning at word and phrase level. 

Grammar: How the language is built i.e the structure and rules which underpin how we form sentences 

Phonology: How we organise the sounds of our language to produce certain effects including rhythm, rhyme, intonation, stress and pauses ect.

Pragmatics: How we know what language means when it is used in a specific context, sometimes described as 'reading between the lines' 

Discourse: (i) how longer stretches of text are organised (cohesion- how it holds together e.g. use of discourse markers) (ii) the way texts create identities for particular individuals, groups or institutions e.g. the discourse of law, politics, the media. 

Graphology: How the design of a text can contribute to meaning including use of fonts, graphics, colours ect. 

Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Terminology

  • Adjective: Descriptive word
  • Noun: Names, Places and People 
  • Adverb: Words to describe a verb
  • Verb: Doing word
  • Simile: As/Like
  • Personification: Giving an inanimate object human qualities  
  • fillers: Umm
  • Metaphor: Saying something is something
  • Onomatopoeia: Words that sound like sounds 
  • Personification: Like pathetic fallacy 
  • Pathetic fallacy: Where the weather relate to the mood
  • Rhetorical question: No answer to the question needed
  • Jargon: Subject specific language
  • Triple: 3 words to describe
  • Hyperbole: Over Exaggerating 
  • punctuation: !?;:.
  • Dialect: The language used
  • Accent: How the words sound
  • Clause: Part of punctuation 
  • Alliteration: Beginning with same letter or sound
  • repetition: Repeating 
  • Active verb: When you know the subject

Sunday, 6 September 2015

Frame Works


  • Graphology: Visual aspects such as form, purpose, audience, font and punctuation e.g. Google changing its font. 
  • Lexis and semantics: Words and meanings e.g. vocabulary of English
  •   Grammar including morphology: Patterns and shapes of sentences e.g. clauses, phrases, words and sentences. 
  • Pragmatics: Context/Meaning, types of meanings
  • Discourse: Communication, how it looks e.g. genre, modes and context 
  • Phonetics, Phonology and Prosodics: Speech, sounds and effects e.g. onomatopoeia, alliteration and volume

Thursday, 3 September 2015

Replacing Languages



This article, which was written in 2005, explains how there is now a different dialect which teenagers use to include "different ethnic groups to communicate across the racial divide."

It is stated in the article that research has been completed to back this up. Using a small group of 32 teenagers between the ages of 16-18, the researches found that all students spoke in the same dialect no matter of their background. However, the new language has created some concerns, such as the way students write in their written exams and therefore it has been banned from one school in south London. 

This new language has shown that this new dialect may be replacing older, traditional dialect such as Cockney. 

Wednesday, 2 September 2015

Change In Language



This article is based on how people's, mainly the younger generation's, dialect and accent has changed. The article begins with a small group of people having a conversation on a bus which the listener doesn't really understand, the conversation is later translated by a school boy who says this language is used by teenagers to look cool. 

The language used is due to multiculturalism and therefore becomes an easier language for all ethnic and social backgrounds to understand. A good quote in this article is " The message is that people are beginning to sound the same regardless of their colour or ethnic background." This shows that this language is now becoming the norm to most people no matter where they originate from.