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440 sluicing<br />

the sentence The children – home, the ‘slot’ marked by the dash can be ‘filled’<br />

by came, are, went, etc. – a subclass of verbs. Approaches characterized by this<br />

emphasis are sometimes referred to as slot-and-filler models. The analysis of<br />

sentence structure in terms of slots is a major feature of tagmemic grammar,<br />

where the notion is used to identify the filler items (e.g. ‘subject slot’,<br />

‘object slot’).<br />

(2) A term used in autosegmental phonology for an element on the skeletal<br />

tier. These elements are also known as V-slots and C-slots, referring to<br />

the segments to which vowels and consonants must associate if they are to be<br />

realized (see association line).<br />

sluicing (n.) A term sometimes used in syntax for a type of ellipsis, in which<br />

an interrogative item is interpreted as a complete question, the omitted material<br />

being retrieved from the previous discourse. The deletion leaves a WH-phrase,<br />

as in Somebody just left. Guess who. Cases where the existential quantifier<br />

some is the antecedent are called sprouting, as in He ate. I don’t know what.<br />

small clause (SC) A term used in government-binding theory for a clause<br />

that contains neither a finite verb nor an infinitival to. Lacking both C<br />

and I, its structure can be defined as [NP XP], where XP is an AP, NP, etc.<br />

Examples include John considered [Mary foolish], Mary considered [John a<br />

fool], I want [him off my boat] and I saw [him do it].<br />

social accent see accent (1)<br />

social deixis<br />

see deixis<br />

social dialectology<br />

see class dialect, dialectology<br />

social function see function (3)<br />

social-interactionism (n.) In language acquisition, the view that language is a<br />

rule-governed cultural actvitity learned through interaction with others. It contrasts<br />

especially with those theories which view language as an innate capacity.<br />

See empiricism, emergentism, innateness.<br />

social stratification<br />

see stratification<br />

sociohistorical linguistics A approach within sociolinguistics which studies<br />

the forms and uses of language in society, and how particular linguistic<br />

functions and types of variation develop over time within specific languages,<br />

speech communities, social groups and individuals.<br />

sociolect (n.) A term used by some sociolinguists to refer to a linguistic variety<br />

(or lect) defined on social (as opposed to regional) grounds, e.g. correlating<br />

with a particular social class or occupational group.<br />

sociolinguistics (n.) A branch of linguistics which studies all aspects of the<br />

relationship between language and society. Sociolinguists study such matters

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