- Valspeak
Valspeak is a common name for a now partially universal American
sociolect , originally of Southern Californians, in particularvalley girl s. This stereotype originated in the 1970s, but was at its peak in the 1980s and lost popularity in the late 1990s and 2000s. Though for a brief period a national fad, many phrases and elements of Valspeak, along with surfer slang andskateboarding slang , are stable elements of theCalifornia English dialect lexicon, and in some cases widerAmerican English (such as the widespread use of "like" as conversational filler). Elements of valspeak can now be found virtually everywhere English is spoken, particularly among young native English speakers.cite book
last = Cralle
first = Trevor
title = The Surfin'ary: A Dictionary of Surfing Terms and Surfspeak
publisher = Ten Speed Press
date = 2001
location =
pages = page 308
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=otcdFFJSEaEC&pg=PA308&ots=chpTWGR5ia&dq=%22valspeak%22+-wikipedia&ie=ISO-8859-1&sig=hqo8Nkt-vibNfgU2ZqyjGemSbg0 | doi =
id = ]The term "Valley Girl" and the Valley manner of speech was given a wider circulation with the release of a hit single by
Frank Zappa entitled "Valley Girl," on which Moon Zappa, Frank's fourteen-year-old daughter, delivered a monologue of meaningless phrases in "valspeak" behind the music. This song, Frank Zappa's onlyTop 40 hit in theUnited States , popularized phrases such as "grody to the max". Some of the terms used by Moon were not actually Valley phrases, but were surfer terms instead (such as "tubular" and "gnarly"). But due to the song's popularity, some of the surfer phrases actually entered the speech of real Valley teens after this point. The Los Angeles surfing subculture, on the other hand, did not generally begin using the Valley terms, and in fact often despise users of the terms.Valspeak is used heavily in the 1995 film "Clueless" and quite a lot in "
Wayne's World ". The character of Tiffany Blum-Deckler in MTV'sDaria also uses Valspeak.Intonation
* Excessive use of
high rising terminal . Statements have rising intonation, causing normal declarative language to appear to the listener as interrogative. Also known as "uptalking" or the "moronic interrogative."Emphasizing phrases
"totally", "so totally", "Totes"
*Meaning: "very" or "really"
*Usage: Can be used anywhere in a sentence, even in syntactically awkward positions (e.g. before verbs)
*Examples: "I totally paused!", "He so totally said that to her!""
like "
*Meaning: Indicates that an approximation follows, rather than a precise description or verbatim quote. "I was like 'Oh my God!' " means "I said something like 'Oh my God!' or otherwise indicated my suprise." Preparing listeners for less precision facilitates Valspeak's traditionally high speed.
*Usage:Quotative particle.
**Example: "She was like 'oh my gawd you have to see this', but I was like, 'shut up! you're kidding!'"
*Usage:Filled pause or hedge.
**Example: "Her new hat is like, a greeny-brown color.""why"
*Usage: Added for emphasis, but has no particular meaning.
*Example: "Oh, why, that came out of nowhere!""!"
*Meaning: "Everybody knows that!", "Obviously!", etc.
*Usage: Usually said with heavy emphasis, often while rolling your eyes. Commonly begins a sentence or phrase, or is its own sentence.
*Example: "Haven't I heard that before?" "Duh, it's like a famous quote!""As if!"
*Meaning: "You are wrong", "It's not going to happen", "You wish", etc.
*Usage: Used in its own sentence, usually to contradict the previous sentence or demonstrate skepticism: "As if (I would ever do that!)".
*Example: "You expect me to wear that? As if!""What-ever!"
*Meaning: "I don't believe you", "I don't care", etc.
*Usage: Used as a complete sentence to dismiss a topic, often during situations where the person delivering the phrase understands that the argument is lost or pointless. Special emphasis is placed on "Ever". It is used as an often weak comeback to other's insults.
*Example: "You're, like, so totally out of nail polish? What-EVER!""Worst (something) ever!"
*Meaning: Short for "This is the worst (something) I have ever seen!"
*Usage: Usually said with significant pauses between each word.
*Example: "Worst. Movie. Ever (sometimes written as "evar")!""so", "like", "OK", "you know", "or something"
*Usage: Usually used as fillers with no particular meaning.
*Example: "So OK, I was totally like, you know, 'I have no idea' or something!""I know right?!"
*Aninterrobang of agreement.
*Example: Person1: "Ugh, those UGGs are so 2005" / Person2: "I know right?""(Also see Vocabulary below.)"
Other characteristics
The dialect can often be distinguished by its intonation, and by its
pharyngealisation of certain consonant sounds, particularly the "L" andrhotic "R" sounds occurring in the codaFact|date=February 2007.Pharyngealisation is rare in the English language and its presence here is possibly unique withinAmerican English , though it is detectable in similar circumstances in some variants ofIrish English andScottish English .Vocabulary
References
ee also
*
California English
*Jive filter - a novelty program that translates English into parody forms.
*Pink Five - aStar Wars parody fanfilm starring a Valley girl.
*Skateboarding slang
*Gap Girls - aSaturday Night Live sketch, prominently featuring Valspeak phrases.External links
* [http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/jbc/home/chef.html "Valspeak" text translator]
* [http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Hills/5342/Clueless.htm Clueless: the script]
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