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colloquial  and  dialect,  because  in  actual  communication  the  two
                            are often used together. Moreover, we have only the evidence of
                            fiction  to  go  by,  and  this  may  be  not  quite  accurate  in  speech
                            characterisation.  The  basis  of  distinction  between  low  colloquial
                            and the two other types of colloquial is purely social. Everybody
                            remembers G.B. Shaw’s "Pygmalion  where the problem of speech
                            as a mark of one’s social standing and of social inequalities is one
                            of the central issues. Ample material for observation of this layer
                            of  vocabulary  is  provided  by  the  novels  of  Alan  Sillitoe,  Sid
                            Chaplin or Stan Barstow. The chief peculiarities of low colloquial
                            concern  grammar  and  pronunciation;  as  to  the  vocabulary,  it  is
                            different  from  familiar colloquial  in that  it contains  more  vulgar
                            words, and sometimes also elements of dialect.
                                  Slang is language of a highly colloquial style, is considered
                            as below the level of standard educated speech, and consists either
                            of new words or of current words employed in some special sense.
                            All or most slang words are current words whose meanings have
                            been  metaphorically  shifted.  Each  slang  metaphor  is  rooted  in  a
                            joke, but not in a kind or amusing joke, This is the criterion for
                            distinguishing  slang  from  colloquialisms:  most  slang  words  are
                            metaphors  and  jocular,  often  with  a  coarse,  mocking,  cynical
                            colouring. Slang words cannot be distinguished from other words
                            by  sound  or  meaning.  Indeed,  all  slang  words  were  once  cant,
                            jargon,  argot,  dialect,  nonstandard,  or  taboo.  For  example,  the
                            American slang to neck (to kiss and caress) was originally student
                            cant; flattop  (an aircraft carrier) was originally  navy  jargon; and
                            pineapple (a bomb or hand grenade) was originally criminal argot.
                            Such  words  did  not,  of  course,  change  their  sound  or  meaning
                            when  they  became  slang.  Many  slang  words,  such  as  blizzard,
                            mob,  movie,  phone,  gas,  and  others,  have  become  informal  or
                            standard and, of course, did not change in sound or meaning when
                            they did so. In fact, most slang words are homonyms of standard
                            words,  spelled  and  pronounced  just  like  their  standard
                            counterparts, as for example (American slang), cabbage (money),













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