Code-Switching and Code-Mixing among the Sri Lankan Sinhala Speakers

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2008

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Kelaniya

Abstract

As occurring in every bilingual community, in Sri Lanka, too, code-mixing and code switching in speech, has become a common phenomenon, specially, among the Sri Lankan Sinhala speakers. They mix Sinhala and English often when they communicate and it has become a threat to our mother-tongue Sinhala. This paper focuses on how the Sri Lankan Sinhalese mix codes in speech the investigations of their speech patterns, and how code switching and code mixing has become a threat to the mother- tongue. A maj or aim of this study is to find out the possible causes, why and how people code switch or mix in discourse. It is shown that from a socio-functional perspective, the bilingual may use code -mixing for expressing modernization. In the second part of this study the characteristic features of the code- mixers and code-switchers are considered phonologically, morphologically and syntactically. The next section discusses how the attitudes of people towards code-mixing has changed from negative to positive and that it has imposed itself as the norm of language use in most bilingual - communities. Finally, this study discusses briefly the impact of code-mixing on language structure. A survey of the literature on code-mixing in different bilingual communities reveals that the use of code-mixing normally brings changes and innovations in the language structure.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Karnalasuriya, H.K., 2008. Code-Switching and Code-Mixing among the Sri Lankan Sinhala Speakers, Proceedings of the Annual Research Symposium 2008, Faculty of Graduate Studies, University of Kelaniya, pp 08.

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By