prescriptivism
Linguística
Verbete 1 de 1
substantivo
Contexto: "MacKay (1980) argues for a kind of empirically based prescriptivism, arguing that prescriptive guidelines provide important information for speakers and learners of a language about how to communicate effectively."
Fonte: BRADLEY, Evan D.. The influence of linguistic and social attitudes on grammaticality judgments of singular ‘they’. Elsevier: Language Sciences. Brandywine, 31 jan. 2020. p. 1-11. Disponível em: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0388000120300048?via%3Dihub. Acesso em: 16 ago. 2021.
Fonte: BRADLEY, Evan D.. The influence of linguistic and social attitudes on grammaticality judgments of singular ‘they’. Elsevier: Language Sciences. Brandywine, 31 jan. 2020. p. 1-11. Disponível em: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0388000120300048?via%3Dihub. Acesso em: 16 ago. 2021.
Termo equivalente: prescritivismo.
Definição: "Prescriptivism is concerned with defining and enforcing standards within a language group and, occasionally, error detection and correction (McKinney & Swann, 2001)."
Fonte: Smith, H. L., Sánchez, P., Ek, L. D., & Machado-Casas, M. (2011). From linguistic imperialism to linguistic concientización: Learning from heritage language speakers. In D. Schwarzer, M. Petrón, & C. Luke (Eds.), Research informing practice—Practice informing research: Innovative teaching methodologies for world language teachers (pp. 177–199). IAP Information Age Publishing.
Fonte: Smith, H. L., Sánchez, P., Ek, L. D., & Machado-Casas, M. (2011). From linguistic imperialism to linguistic concientización: Learning from heritage language speakers. In D. Schwarzer, M. Petrón, & C. Luke (Eds.), Research informing practice—Practice informing research: Innovative teaching methodologies for world language teachers (pp. 177–199). IAP Information Age Publishing.
Definição em português: "O prescritivismo se preocupa com a definição e aplicação de padrões dentro de um grupo de idiomas e, ocasionalmente, com a detecção e correção de erros (McKinney & Swann, 2001)."