interlanguage
English
Etymology
inter- + language. In the language acquisition sense introduced by Larry Selinker in 1972.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ɪnˈtɜɹˈlæŋɡwɪd͡ʒ/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -æŋɡwɪdʒ
Noun
interlanguage (plural interlanguages)
- A language generated by a student of a foreign language that incorporates aspects of their native language and the target language.
- Trasyanka and Surzhyk are interlanguages: a Belarusian–Russian and a Ukrainian-Russian mixed language.
- 2011, Anna Trosborg, Interlanguage Pragmatics: Requests, Complaints, and Apologies, Walter de Gruyter, →ISBN, page 54:
- The learner's selection from his/her store of interlanguage rules is not haphazard but systematic and predictable, based as it is on his/her existing rule system in much the same way as the native speaker bases his/her speech on the internalized knowledge of the L1 system.
- A lingua franca, a common language used by speakers of different languages
- Synonyms: koine, lingua franca
- Latin used to be the European interlanguage. Currently English widely serves this purpose.
- 2011 October 28, Adam Thirlwell, “The Joyful Side of Translation”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- As [David] Bellos points out, those born as English speakers are now a minority of English speakers: most speak it as a second language. English is the world’s biggest interlanguage.
- A pidgin or creole
Related terms
Translations
mixed language
|
lingua franca — see lingua franca
pidgin — see pidgin
creole — see creole
Further reading
- interlanguage on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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