Metalanguage is language used to talk about language. In VCE English Language, using correct metalanguage is not merely a stylistic choice — it is the primary tool by which you demonstrate analytical precision and command of the discipline.
Imprecise language about language is a common trap. Compare:
The second response demonstrates command of subsystem knowledge and explains function, not just form.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Every claim in your analysis should be supported by metalanguage. Name the subsystem, name the feature, quote the example, explain the effect. This is the ENLAN analysis formula.
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Elision | Dropping sounds in casual speech (gonna) |
| Assimilation | Sounds merge with neighbours (lemme, whaddya) |
| G-dropping | Final /ŋ/ becomes /n/ (talkin’, comin’) |
| Vowel reduction | Unstressed vowels weakened (‘bout) |
| Prosody | The melody of speech: intonation, stress, rhythm, tempo, volume |
| Intonation | Rise and fall of pitch across utterances |
| High Rising Terminal (HRT) | Rising intonation at end of statements (Australian English feature) |
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Clipping | Shortening a word (servo, arvo, brekky) |
| Diminutive | Word ending conveying smallness or affection (doggo, prezzies, postie) |
| Affixation | Adding a prefix or suffix |
| Blending | Merging two words (brunch, chillax) |
| Non-standard morphology | Grammar that departs from SE norms (I done it, we was) |
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Colloquial lexis | Everyday informal vocabulary (heaps, arvo) |
| Slang | In-group, rapidly-changing informal vocabulary |
| Jargon | Specialised vocabulary of a group or field |
| Taboo language | Vocabulary violating social norms (sex, death, profanity) |
| Dysphemism | Harsh/blunt term where neutral expected (snuffed it) |
| Hyperbole | Exaggeration for emphasis (dying, obsessed) |
| Neologism | Newly coined word or expression |
| Semantic bleaching | Word loses its original meaning/force over time |
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Ellipsis | Omission of words recoverable from context |
| Minor sentence | Grammatically incomplete utterance (No way!, Absolutely!) |
| Parataxis | Clauses loosely joined with and or but |
| Left-dislocation | Topic placed at front for emphasis (That dog, it’s massive) |
| Imperative mood | Command form (Come here!) |
| Non-standard agreement | Subject-verb mismatch (She don’t know) |
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Backchannel | Listener response that signals engagement (mmm, yeah) |
| Turn-taking | Mechanism for managing who speaks when |
| Adjacency pair | Two-part exchange (greeting/return greeting) |
| Phatic communion | Language for social bonding rather than information (How are you?) |
| Filled pause | Non-lexical sound filling thinking time (um, uh, like) |
| False start | Abandoned utterance beginning |
| Repair | Self-correction in spoken language |
| Overlap | Two speakers speaking simultaneously |
| Cohesion | Formal links holding a text together |
| Coherence | The overall meaning-making of a text |
| Discourse marker | Words organising spoken interaction (so, right, like, anyway) |
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Implicature | Meaning implied beyond literal words |
| Face | Public self-image that is managed in interaction |
| Positive politeness | Strategies affirming the other’s face |
| Negative politeness | Strategies protecting the other’s autonomy |
| In-group | The social community a speaker belongs to |
| Solidarity | Sense of shared identity and belonging |
| Register | Variety of language suited to a context |
| Tenor | Social relationship between participants |
EXAM TIP: Use metalanguage to refer to both the form AND the function. For every feature you name, ask: What is this doing? What effect does it have on the participants or on the text’s meaning?
COMMON MISTAKE: Using metalanguage incorrectly is penalised. If you are unsure, describe the feature clearly rather than risk misapplying a term. However, studying these terms precisely is the most reliable exam preparation strategy.
APPLICATION: Create your own glossary as you study. Write the term, define it in your own words, and add an example from a text you have studied. Reviewing this glossary weekly builds automatic recall under exam conditions.