timepiececlock: (shoot with my mind)
[personal profile] timepiececlock
Hello, hello folks! I have Linguistics field project that I need you guys to help me with. You see, I was collecting data IRL, but I lost some of the documents and I need new data from people. Can you help me in my time of emergency? I need to get at least 18 people to fill this out, the more the better. Men are especially welcome since there's so few on my friends list. Er... that I know about, anyway. ;P

If you guys could answer these 8 survey questions, that would be great.

If you could then create a link in your journal to this entry to spread the word about my survey, that would be even better. But that's not part of the survey, so you don't have to and you could just answer the questions.

Thank you so so much.

----------------------------------------
SURVEY

Gender:
Nationality/ the country of residence which most affected your speech:
Age:


If you are 29 years or younger, do not fill out any more questions. You may leave now with my thanks.


If you are 30 years or older, please answer the following opinion questions to the best of your ability, and feel free to elaborate as much as you like:

1. Do you think language and vocabulary in common daily use has changed since 1990?

2. Do you think widespread computer technology has had a significant effect on the vocabulary you use and understand in the last 10-15 years?

3. How would you say the vocabulary of you, your children, or the people you know has changed since 1990 with the popularization of the internet?

4. What are some new words, phrases, idioms, or other bits of figurative language you might use now that you did not use 10-15 years ago? Do these relate to technology or to other things in life?

5. What are some positive aspects of changes in slang, terminology, idioms, etc. that have occurred since or resulting from the 90s and beyond?

6. What aspects of changes in slang, terminology, idioms, etc. frustrate you or do you dislike?

7. What’s your favorite word, phrase, term or idiom introduced in the last 10-15 years?

8. Do you have a job in the computer/tech industry, and if so how might that affect your answers on this survey?

----------------------------------------

Thank you for participating. NOTE: The age question is very important so please be honest about it... my project involves the perspective of people over 30 because that's an age wherein I judged that people would have lived long enough to accurately measure some changes in the language over longer periods of time. Of course, if you want to fill it out for fun, you're welcome to do so. Just make sure you tell me so on the age question. :)

EDIT: I've got enough now, thank you!

Date: 2004-03-15 08:28 pm (UTC)
minim_calibre: (Default)
From: [personal profile] minim_calibre
SURVEY

Gender: Female
Nationality/ the country of residence which most affected your speech: US (Pacific Northwest, Canadian Parents)
Age: 29 (though, if you run short on data, I'm far closer to 30 than I am to 29, and almost everyone from my high school class would now be 30, and I'm filling the rest out for you just in case.)

If you are 29 years or younger, do not fill out any more questions. You may leave now with my thanks.


If you are 30 years or older, please answer the following opinion questions to the best of your ability, and feel free to elaborate as much as you like:

1. Do you think language and vocabulary in common daily use has changed since 1990?

Yes.

2. Do you think widespread computer technology has had a significant affect on the vocabulary you use and understand in the last 10-15 years?

Fairly significant (PS, this should be "effect")

3. How would you say the vocabulary of you, your children, or the people you know has changed since 1990 with the popularization of the internet?

TLAs and netspeak are far more common, and the dropping of articles and pronouns (a habit seen mostly in email communication) seems to be spreading.

4. What are some new words, phrases, idioms, or other bits of figurative language you might use now that you did not use 10-15 years ago? Do these relate to technology or to other things in life?

Google (as a verb, technological), IM (as a verb, technological), Hellmouth (other), RAS/RAS in (as a verb, technological--the TLA stands for Remote Access Server. To RAS in is to connect to the RAS for the sake of doing work. "I had a cold, so I just RASed in."), Nilly (verb, sort of technological, as it's a verb formed on an internet community.)

5. What are some positive aspects of changes in slang, terminology, idioms, etc. that have occurred since or resulting from the 90s and beyond?

Change in language is neither positive nor negative. It just is.

6. What aspects of changes in slang, terminology, idioms, etc. frustrate you or do you dislike?

See above, though I hate it when people say URL as "Earl" rather than as "U-R-L" and wish they'd stop.

7. What’s your favorite word, phrase, term or idiom introduced in the last 10-15 years?

At the moment, probably google.

8. Do you have a job in the computer/tech industry, and if so how might that affect your answers on this survey?

Yes, and it completely affects my answers. I've been known to describe damned near everything in tech terms without meaning to do so.

Date: 2004-03-15 08:53 pm (UTC)
ext_10182: Anzo-Berrega Desert (Default)
From: [identity profile] rashaka.livejournal.com
Thank you! Your response is greatly appreciated. And I'll probably include your answers anyway since 29 is close to 30 and I can round up.

Fairly significant (PS, this should be "effect")

::blinks:: ::rereads:: oh, hey, you're right! I'll change that. :)

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