This article discusses the novel Pygmalionby George Bernard Shaw (1957) which depicts Eliza, a flower girl from East London, who became the subject of an “experiment” by a Professor of Phonetics who vowed to change the way she spoke. The story is an excellent example of a very real and contextual portrait of how language, particularly socio-semantics, play a role in the achievement of communicative competence.
CITATION STYLE
Anugerahwati, M. (2015). PYGMALION: A STUDY OF SOCIO-SEMANTICS. TEFLIN Journal - A Publication on the Teaching and Learning of English, 21(2), 202. https://doi.org/10.15639/teflinjournal.v21i2/202-210
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