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Breaking the Norms of Bulgarian Language Online: Language Adaptation or Language Illiteracy
Breaking the Norms of Bulgarian Language Online: Language Adaptation or Language Illiteracy

Author(s): Milen Filipov, Dinka Zlateva
Subject(s): Social Sciences, Language studies, Language and Literature Studies, Education, Sociolinguistics, Eastern Slavic Languages, Vocational Education, Adult Education, Higher Education , State/Government and Education, Philology, Inclusive Education / Inclusion, Stylistics, Distance learning / e-learning
Published by: Национално издателство за образование и наука „Аз-буки“
Keywords: Standard of the Bulgarian Language; breaking of linguistic norms; social network sites communication; communication accommodation theory; audience design mode

Summary/Abstract: The purpose of the research was to explore the experiences of Bulgarian university students, representatives of generations Y and Z, with breaking the rules of the Standard of Bulgarian language when communicating with textual posts on the Facebook social network site (SNS) and social networking applications (apps). Breaking language norms is due to the perception of the SNS and social apps communication as speaking rather than writing. Therefore, many of the language rules applicable to the writing are broken. The research employed a phenomenological inductive research strategy. It used a narrative literature review from 2011 to 2021 and an in-depth interview of 15 university students as research instruments. The theoretical framework was built on the theory of communication accommodation and audience design. Two main themes crystallized in the in-depth interviews: 1) communication in SNS and social apps – visual, verbal, and informal and 2) context and communicator determine the level of the Bulgarian language rules observance. In these themes, perceiving SNS communication as speaking, not as writing, hurrying up to join the communication, and the perception of the online environment as informal, explained the breaking the language rules. The research is the first to study the issue in the context of the experiences of the language users, and it opens the scientific field to further research.

  • Issue Year: 63/2021
  • Issue No: 5
  • Page Range: 528 - 551
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English