Definitions

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  • adjective linguistics of or relating to diglossia

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Arabic is characterized by a so-called "diglossic" situation, in which the formal, uniform written language (Modern Standard Arabic) differs considerably from the various spoken dialects.

    The Cranky Professor 2008

  • My view is that English will become increasingly diglossic, as time goes by - that is, where two variants of the same language are used within a society as we see in Arabic, for example, with Classical and Colloquial variants co-existing.

    On languages uniting people DC 2006

  • Many speakers are happily diglossic - they speak standard to their college or work friends but instantly switch to their local variety when they pick up the phone to speak to their parents.

    languagehat.com: BAY DIALECT DYING. 2005

  • It's going to be less useful in multi-lingual, very diglossic or post-colonial societies where the power of the colonial language has hindered the development of local languages it should be noted that all three of these apply to most of India.

    languagehat.com: NATIVE SPEAKER. 2004

  • Especially for languages that don't have a writing system (or a very recent one), are diglossic (different writing systems for different class/political/genre purposes), don't use a roman alphabet, and on.

    Ask MetaFilter dave99 2010

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