Formal and Informal Language
Formal and Informal Language
Most people speak and write in different ways on different occasions. In some languages,
for example, there are very complicated rules about how to speak to older or more
important people. English does not have a system of this kind.
However, there are some words and structures which are mostly used in formal situations,
when people are careful about how they express themselves: for example in official notices
business letters or reports, meetings or conferences, or polite conversations with strangers.
And some words and structures are mostly used in informal situations: for example in
conversations with friends, or letters to one's family. Writing is more often formal, and
speech is more often informal, but informal writing and formal speech are used when the
situation makes them preferable.
Customer toilets are at the rear of the building. (Printed notice in an Oxfordshire petrol
station)
The toilets are outside round the back. (Handwritten notice in the same petrol station, put
up perhaps because the manager felt this would be easier for some of his customers to
understand.)
Most words and expressions are neither formal nor informal, but neutral - English speakers
do not have to know two ways of saying everything.
Grammar
Some grammatical structures have different formal and informal versions. For example,
contracted auxiliary verbs and negatives are common in informal speech and writing.
Compare:
1
FORMAL: In which century did he live?
INFORMAL: Which century did he live in?
Some determiners are followed more often by singular verb forms in formal language, and
by plural forms in informal language. Compare:
Subject and object forms of pronouns (e.g. I and me) are used differently in formal and
informal language. Compare:
Vocabulary
Some words and expressions are used mainly in formal situations; in neutral or informal
2
situations other words or expressions are used. And some words and expressions are only
used in informal situations. Some examples:
FORMAL: commence
NEUTRAL/INFORMAL: begin, start
FORMAL: repair
NEUTRAL/INFORMAL: mend (BrE)
INFORMAL: fix
A Scales of formality
Some groups of words can be put on a scale from (very) formal to (very) informal.
3
very formal neutral very informal
offspring children kids
abode/residence house/flat place
alcoholic beverages drink booze
Clippings
Shortening a word tends to make it less formal, as in fridge and bye.
Michael McCarthy and Felicity O’Dell, English Vocabulary in Use, Cambridge University
Press, 10th printing 2008, page 94.