Code-Switching and Bilingualism
Code-switching is the alternation between two or more languages or varieties within a single conversation, and a central window onto how bilinguals use their full linguistic repertoire meaningfully.
Definition
Code-switching is the practice by bilingual or multilingual speakers of alternating between languages or varieties within a discourse, studied both for its grammatical patterning and for its social and interactional meaning.
Scope
This topic covers the types of code-switching (inter-sentential, intra-sentential, and tag), its grammatical constraints, and its social and discourse functions. It includes Gumperz's situational and metaphorical switching, Myers-Scotton's markedness model of code choice, and the matrix-language frame for the structure of switching. The distinction from borrowing is treated here, while broader societal multilingualism is covered by the parent area.
Core questions
- What types of code-switching occur, and how are they structured grammatically?
- What social and discourse functions does switching serve?
- How do speakers signal meaning through situational versus metaphorical switching?
- How is code-switching distinguished from lexical borrowing?
Key concepts
- Inter-sentential, intra-sentential, and tag switching
- Situational vs. metaphorical switching
- Markedness model of code choice
- Matrix language frame
- Code-switching vs. borrowing
Key theories
- Situational and metaphorical switching
- Gumperz distinguished switches driven by a change in situation from metaphorical switches that import the associations of one code into another context to convey social meaning.
- The markedness model
- Myers-Scotton argued that each code carries expected rights and obligations, so a marked code choice is a deliberate negotiation of the social relationship between speakers.
History
Code-switching emerged as a serious object of study with Gumperz's work on conversational switching in the 1970s and 1980s, followed by Poplack's grammatical constraints and Myers-Scotton's social and structural models in the 1980s and 1990s.
Debates
- Grammatical constraints on switching
- Researchers debate whether universal grammatical constraints govern where switches can occur, as constraint-based models claim, or whether switching is better explained by a matrix-language frame and language-specific factors.
Key figures
- John Gumperz
- Carol Myers-Scotton
- Shana Poplack
Related topics
Seminal works
- gumperz1982
- myersscotton1993
- poplack1980
Frequently asked questions
- Is code-switching a sign of poor language ability?
- No. Research shows code-switching is a skilled, rule-governed practice that follows grammatical constraints and serves meaningful social and discourse functions, reflecting command of both languages rather than deficiency.