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Functions of code-switching: a case study of a mixed Malay-Chinese family in the home domain
Siti Hamin Stapa1, Nurul Nadiah Begum Sahabudin Khan2.
In the social environment of Malaysia various languages are used in daily communication.
It is common for Malaysians of the same linguistic background or Malaysians of different
ethnicities, educational background or social strata to pepper their conversation with
linguistic interference, interlingual code-mixing and code-switching. Code switching is
a phenomenon that occurs in both formal and informal settings. Since the population of
Malaysia is ethnically and linguistically heterogeneous, intercultural marriages among
Malaysians occurs regardless of ethnic background and religious orientation. Marriage is
viewed differently by couples of interracial marriages. The different perspective on marriage
may reflect the linguistic choices of couples when they communicate with their spouses
in the home. Studies have found that code-switching in interracial marriages in Malaysia
occurs in informal settings in the home domain especially in verbal communication
regardless of the family’s ethnic background, be it Malay, Chinese or Indian. This research
focusses on the types and functions of code-switching in a mixed Malay-Chinese family
in the home domain. The types of code-switching were analysed using Poplack’s (1980)
types of code-switching while the functions of code-switching were further analysed using
a conceptual framework developed by the researcher that was adapted from Appel and
Muysken’s (2005) functional model of code-switching and Hoffman’s (1991) functions
of code-switching. .
Affiliation:
- Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Malaysia
- Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Malaysia
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Indexation |
Indexed by |
MyJurnal (2019) |
H-Index
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0 |
Immediacy Index
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0.000 |
Rank |
0 |
Indexed by |
Scopus (SCImago Journal Rankings 2016) |
Impact Factor
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Rank |
Q2 (Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)) Q2 (Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)) Q2 (Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)) Q2 (Social Sciences (miscellaneous)) |
Additional Information |
0.333 (SJR) |
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