POLITICAL LANGUAGE Language is the life blood of politics. Political power struggles‚ and the legitimisation of political policies and authorities occurs primarily through discourse and verbal representations. Power can either be exercised through coercion or what US commentator Walter Lippman termed in the 1930s the manufacture of consent. Largely unable‚ and hopefully unwilling‚ to coerce; political authorities in so called democratic polities often need to manufacture consent in order to
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08/10/13 The power of language Have you ever been in a foreign country‚ where you didn’t speak the native language? How were you treated? How did you communicate? What if this foreign country was right here in the United States? At what point do we as a country‚ America‚ accept all the languages spoken here as equally important? Then of course there is the discussion about the quality of English that is spoken. Do you
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Language Precis Words with Built-in Judgments S. I. Hayawaka and Alan R. Hayawaka’s article‚ “Words with Built-in Judgments”‚ asserts that prejudice is predominantly seen in language through specific word choices we make. Both Hayawakas point out that people use words such as “Hispanic” and “developmentally disabled” to avoid insulting a specific group of people‚ as well as other examples‚ in order to prove that people watch how they speak every day. Given the extensive factual information‚ it is
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am writing this letter to complain about the episode 3 from the Season 13 of Modern Family where the small girl Lilly uses the f-word over and over again. This is unacceptable and inappropriate! I as a parent don’t want my child to hear the vulgar language on TV. TV programs have a special kind of effect on the children. This is so because they find the TV actors to be their role models. They want to wear the same clothes‚ act the same way and even talk the same way – basically live up to them. That’s
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The Abstract: This paper will be dealing with the use of Violence and its legitimization through manipulation of language by the state in dealing with “the other”. In an attempt to investigate the role played by the state‚ which monopolizes the use of violence for the sake of civilizing its people‚ inspired by a documentary titled “where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?”‚ this paper tries to go beyond spoken and written words to reach a better understanding of this role. It starts by defining
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Language Barriers Linda Williams COM 200 Ticey Hosley April 4‚ 2011 Body Language Body language is communicating by means of facial expressions‚ gestures‚ posture and other wordless signals. Communication is the sharing of information. Individuals communicate using many different modes. For example‚ they may communicate through gestures‚ and facial expressions‚ as well as by speaking and writing. Communication using language requires both a physical component- the central
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Figurative Language Definitions Alliteration Alliteration is the repetition of a single letter in the alphabet (as in "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickle peppers.") or a combination of letters (as in "She sells seashells by the seashore."). It’s just about the easiest form of repetition a poet can use. Metaphor A metaphor compares two unlike things. "My baby sister’s a doll‚" you might say‚ compares your sister’s size and sweetness to that of the perfection of a doll. At another time you might
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An Education in Language by R. RODRIGUEZ Born in 1944 in San Francisco‚ California‚ Richard Rodriguez grew up in a home in which Spanish was the first language; consequently‚ like millions of Americans he learned English as his second language. As a child‚ Rodriguez experienced an oftimes painful struggle to master English‚ which he calls his “public” language. As an adult‚ he attended Stanford University in California and Columbia University in New York‚ following which he did graduate work at the
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similarities. He immediately inquires as to what group of people the creature identifies himself with. People instinctually distinguish themselves into groups based on similarities. Here the similarity is based on language‚ and the creature is attempting to make a connection based on the language he can now speak. After the creature says he has been educated by a French family‚ he goes on to explain his desire to meet with people he loves. All De Lacey would like to know in response to this is if the
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It is also the case that often terms describing race are fairly meaningless. People from the ‘British race’ for example originate from many other cultures and countries‚ depending on how far back you trace their family trees. 2. Prejudiced language Language can be used to make certain ethnic groups appear to be outsiders‚ or different from the ethnic majority. Markedness It is often assumed that immigrants‚ and people from ethnic minorities‚ must fit in with the ways and traditions of the ethnic
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