Code-switching: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Use: Fixed a typo "attrbutes" to "attributes"
add link
Tags: Reverted Visual edit
Line 13:
Code-switching can occur when there is a change in the environment in which one is speaking, or in the context of speaking a different language or switching the verbiage to match that of the audience. There are many ways in which code-switching is employed, such as when speakers are unable to express themselves adequately in a single language or to signal an attitude towards something. Several theories have been developed to explain the reasoning behind code-switching from sociological and linguistic perspectives.
 
== [https://www.academia.edu/94675010/Functions_of_Code_switching_in_Bilingual_Classrooms Use] ==
== Use ==
The earliest known use of the term "code-switching" in print was published in 1953, in a chapter by [[Roman Jakobson]] in ''Results Conf. Anthropologists & Linguists'',<ref>“Code-switching, N.” Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford UP, July 2023. {{doi|10.1093/OED/9205364123}}</ref><ref>"SUPPLEMENT TO
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AMERICAN LINGUISTICS" Vol. 19, No. 2, April 1953 INDIANA UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS in ANTHROPOLOGY AND LINGUISTICS, MEMOIR 8, of the