Language attitudes and ideologies
on linguistic diversity
The examination of language ideologies and attitudes reveals a complex interplay between societal beliefs and individual perceptions regarding linguistic diversity. Language ideology encompasses both descriptive and critical orientations, aiming to understand collective beliefs about language arrangements and to critique sociolinguistic inequalities.
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Language attitudes and ideologies
on linguistic diversity A nexus between language ideology and language attitudes ideologies and attitudes may be incongruent The genesis of a specific attitude can indeed sometimes be traced to a systematic language ideology. Language ideology and attitudes
in applied linguistics They regulate linguistic diversity at the macro and micro level Governments pursue language policies that favour certain languages Preserving ancient Norse language of the Icelandic Sagas Language attitudes both quantitative and qualitative An evaluation of whether, in what way, and to what extent, a specific language, is favourable. the use of more than one language in a place where the monolingual assumption reigns are undesirable psychological tendency to favor or disfavor a particular entity sexiness of French is favourable, whereas the attractiveness of Russian is dubious Language ideology fundamentally qualitative A critical orientation criticizing the sociolinguistic world for its inequalities, its injustices, and its systems of domination A descriptive orientation how language arrangements ought to be and why the collective feels this way seeks to research, identify and understand the shared beliefs of some collective