“…Lastly, in place of specifically linguistic competence, it puts symbolic capital, which is inseparable from the speaker's position in the social structure. (Bourdieu, 1977: 646) The language commodification literature consequently follows Bourdieu in being concerned principally with spokenness, and with the practices, policies and indexicalities around spokenness (Sonntag, 2009;Heller & Duchêne, 2012Boutet, 2012;Davuluy, 2012;Lorente, 2012;Park & Wee, 2012;Del Percio, Flubacher & Duchêne;, Schedel, 2018Van Hoof, 2018;Del Percio, 2018;Pujolar, 2018). In the words of Heller & Duchêne, for example, 'We draw on Bourdieu (1982) to argue that language can be understood as a social practice that consists of circulating communicative resources' (2016: 139).…”