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Exploring the ‘shashification’ of teenage slang

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 September 2018

Extract

The study of the paradigmatic traits of teenage slang has shown that a sense of togetherness is predominant (Eble, 1996; Allen, 1998; Mattiello, 2005, 2008; Smith, 2011). This cohesive linguistic device is not consciously intended to exclude unwished members from conversations or common understanding, but the idea of relying on a preserved sense of solidarity and acceptance is a human urge, especially among teenagers or young adults (cf. Mattiello, 2005: 13). These features are a necessary starting point to understand that the colloquial nature or social restriction of these words and phrases are precisely aimed to ‘establish or reinforce social identity within a group or with a trend or fashion in society at large’ (Eble, 1996: 11).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

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Footnotes

This term has been used to show a parallelism between the process of ‘zazzification’ (Wescott, 1978) and that of ‘shashification’ in the formation of slang words. However, despite their common motivations, these processes rely on different phonological nature: whereas in the former, the voiced sibilant /z/ replaces a voiceless one /s/, no pronunciation shift takes place in the latter. The process of shashification is characterized by a respelling of clipped units ending in /ʃ/, which only affects the morphology of the words.

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