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Qian Du; Jerry Won Lee – AILA Review, 2024
In an era where migration across borders is increasingly the norm, how are our understandings of language and the ways we talk about language being reimagined along the way? This article examines this question by attending to the shifting metadiscourses of "Chinglish," a colloquialism referring to Chinese-English hybridizations.…
Descriptors: Migration, Chinese, English, Sociolinguistics
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Suresh Canagarajah – AILA Review, 2024
Forms of immobility both limit unqualified human agency and enable diverse channels of mobility. In this sense, mobility and immobility work together. Certain philosophical movements such as Southern theories and disability studies treat constraints, sedentariness, and boundaries as needing to be respected and accommodated in any inquiry. This…
Descriptors: Mobility, Language Usage, Translation, Code Switching (Language)
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Yaeko Hori; Yumi Sugihara; Li Wei – Applied Linguistics, 2025
In a world with existential issues, inequalities/injustice are (re)emerging in varying degrees around the globe, and yet, each of us strives to sustain our life with our own disappointments/griefs and desires/hopes. Then, identity formation research should elucidate how a human being makes sense of multifaceted voices/dimensions ('selves' and…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Foreign Students, Code Switching (Language), Language Usage
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Anna Mendoza; Jiaen Ou; Shakina Rajendram; Andrew Coombs – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2025
Translanguaging scholars have debated whether dismantling boundaries between "named" languages is necessary for social justice in education. To explore this issue, we examined teachers' reported use of named languages or translanguaging in classroom activities. We used a survey as an interview protocol to compare the extent to which four…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Elementary School Teachers, Language Usage, Multilingualism
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Neriko Musha Doerr – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2025
How do you read the word "Puke?" It depends on what language you assign to the word--Te Reo Maori or English. This article discusses this politics of "assigning language" and what epistemological and historical contexts shape that process, based on the author's ethnographic fieldwork at a secondary school in Aotearoa/New…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Malayo Polynesian Languages, English, Code Switching (Language)
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González-Howard, María; Andersen, Sage; Pérez, Karina Méndez; Suárez, Enrique – Educational Researcher, 2023
This synthesis examines recent science education research on multilingual students' experiences with language-rich science practices. Adopting a translanguaging lens, we explore how researchers' language conceptualizations impact the science practices they study and the ways multilingual students are positioned. This analysis helps us understand…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Multilingualism, Translation, Language Attitudes
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Alomoush, Omar Ibrahim Salameh – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2023
This article explores linguistic creativity and innovation in multilingual advertising in Jordan through the use of signs displaying Arabinglish with multiple forms in the Jordanian linguistic landscape (LL). Drawing upon notions of nexus analysis [Scollon, R., & Scollon, S. W. (2004). "Nexus analysis: Discourse and the emerging…
Descriptors: Arabic, English, Language Usage, Advertising
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Nassif, Lama; Shapiro, Shawna – Foreign Language Annals, 2023
Code use, including codeswitching and/or style-shifting, is an important but undertaught aspect of L2 sociolinguistic competence, and an important aspect of L2 learners' translanguaging repertoires. This study examines code use in Arabic--a diglossic language with distinct social uses for the prestige variety (Modern Standard Arabic, MSA) and…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Second Language Learning, Arabic, Sociolinguistics
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Hakyoon Lee; Myoung Eun Pang; Jee Hye Park – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2024
This study explores how Korean short-term stayers in the U.S. manage their language practices at home. We focus on the newly formed families who came to the U.S. for a parent's education or a new job. Drawing on the data from self-recorded family interactions, researchers' ethnographic observation, and interviews with the parents, this study…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Language Usage, Korean, English (Second Language)
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Rose Stamp; Duaa Omar-Hajdawood; Rama Novogrodsky – Sign Language Studies, 2024
Reiterative code-switching, when one lexical item from one language is produced immediately after a semantically equivalent lexical item in another language, is a frequent phenomenon in studies of language contact. Several spoken language studies suggest that reiteration functions as a form of accommodation, amplification (emphasis),…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Bilingualism, Sign Language, Language Usage
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Mohammed Nurul Islam; Azirah Hashim – International Education Studies, 2024
Over the decades, Bangladesh has experienced many language contact situations. Based on history, there are many instances of the presence of Urdu, Perso-Arabic, and Hindi (Sanskrit) words within the Bengali language. As a result, when Bangladeshi newspapers use English, there are common Bengali loanwords throughout the articles, derived from the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Usage, English, Newspapers
MK Keran – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Building on the existing concepts of multiliteracies and of translanguaging repertoires, I propose the concept of transliteracy repertoires--or the idea that individuals' idiolects do not naturally delineate between named languages or named modes. I theorize that these transliteracy repertoires: (1) are deeply connected with individuals'…
Descriptors: Translation, Code Switching (Language), Language Usage, Intersectionality
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Katherine Rowley; Kearsy Cormier – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2024
The distinction between natural sign languages and sign-supported speech is a controversial topic and difficult to assess purely on structural terms because of language contact. Here, we consider British Sign Language (BSL) and Sign Supported English (SSE) with reference to Irvine and Gal's (2000. Language ideology and linguistic differentiation.…
Descriptors: Sign Language, Differences, Language Attitudes, Nonverbal Communication
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Quentin C. Sedlacek; Catherine Lemmi; Kimberly Feldman; Nickolaus Ortiz; Maricela Leon – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
Ideologies of language and race are deeply connected in the United States. Language practices associated with racially marginalized communities, such as African American Language (AAL) or Spanglish, are often heavily stigmatized. Such stigma is not grounded in empirical research on language, but rather in "raciolinguistic ideologies"…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Social Bias, Racism, Teacher Attitudes
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Sergio Fernando Juárez – Journal of Communication Pedagogy, 2025
This essay reimagines public speaking education through a culturally sustaining and transgressive lens that challenges dominant norms of language, professionalism, and communication competence. It critiques the ways in which public speaking courses often reinforce linguistic supremacy by privileging standardized English and marginalizing…
Descriptors: Public Speaking, Culturally Relevant Education, Language Usage, Code Switching (Language)
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