register tone style
Overview
This lesson explores the interconnected concepts of register, tone, and style in language. Understanding these elements is crucial for analysing how language adapts to different contexts, audiences, and purposes, and how writers/speakers convey their attitudes and intentions.
1. Understanding Register: Formality and Context
Register refers to the **level of formality** in language use, which is highly dependent on the **context, audience, and purpose** of communication. It's not about 'good' or 'bad' language, but rather 'appropriate' language for a given situation. We can broadly categorise registers into: * **Froz...
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Key Concepts
- Register: The level of formality of language, determined by context, audience, and purpose.
- Tone: The attitude of the writer/speaker towards their subject or audience, conveyed through lexical and grammatical choices.
- Style: The distinctive way an individual or group uses language, encompassing their habitual choices in vocabulary, syntax, and rhetorical devices.
- Field: The subject matter or topic being discussed, influencing lexical choices and technical jargon.
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Exam Tips
- →Always provide specific linguistic evidence (quotes, examples of lexical/grammatical features) to support your analysis of register, tone, and style. Don't just state; demonstrate.
- →When discussing tone, use precise adjectives (e.g., 'sardonic', 'didactic', 'euphemistic', 'emphatic') rather than vague terms like 'good' or 'bad'. Explain *how* the language creates that tone.
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