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Welcome! ASL 3 and 4- Lecture Day.

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Presentation on theme: "Welcome! ASL 3 and 4- Lecture Day."— Presentation transcript:

1 Welcome! ASL 3 and 4- Lecture Day

2 From last year’s classifier PPT

3 Perspectives- ASL 3 Classifier predicates are not limited to one location. For example (Valli p.90):

4 CL:3 “surface pass under vehicle” – signed at eye level indicates “I saw the car go by” Valli p.91

5 ASL 3 Classifiers are bound morphemes- they have no meaning on their own, but must be used in conjunction with their noun ASL 3: locatives- “lock” in place Classifier movement can show several types of meaning Eg. Two ways of showing cars in a row: cl cl cl , or sweeping (concept of more than one)

6 12.Classifiers are: A. bound morphemes B. free morphemes
Test Question: 12.Classifiers are: A. bound morphemes B. free morphemes 13.True or false: Perspective is important in ASL classifier predicates, and can show whether the signer is viewing the predicate or not.

7 Classifiers- examples
Test sheet by Monday to view, practice. Classifier test Wednesday? As you are ready.

8 Misc. Grammar: Noun verb pairs- reduplication
Minimal Pairs- ASL vs. English Language acquisition vs. learning (acquisition naturally occurs, learning is in a class setting, trying to present real-world opportunities but limited Socialize and find real-world opportunities

9 Blocking Environmental Interference
= Tuning out sounds around you The trick: learning when to ignore sound vs. pay attention to it Difference in a conversation vs. interpreting

10 Time Lag The amount of time from when the person spoke to when you interpret their signs The greater the time lag in ASL interpreting, the more accurate the interpretation- to a point Issues: the longer the time lag, the more likely you are to forget information Skilled interpreters develop this over time

11 Levels of Discourse in Linguistics and ASL examples
Advanced ASL Levels of Discourse in Linguistics and ASL examples

12 Levels of Meaning Sociolinguistics, Narration
Semantics, Pragmatics, Prosody S y n t a x Morphology Phonology

13 Phonology Phonology: Organization of speech sounds in a particular language (same sounds, different sound inventories); organization of parts of signs in signed languages Phonetics: The study of speech sounds or parts of signs Articulatory (production) Acoustic (transmission) Auditory (perception)

14 Phonology The study of how languages organize the smallest parts of words or signs A phoneme represents the distinctive unit that if changed will create a minimal pair (ASL minimal pair e.g.- HOME vs. DEAF) Phonetics is the study of how the signs (or sounds) are realized during communication (ASL e.g.-STUDENT)

15 Phonology vs. Morphology
Phonology studies the smallest contrastive parts of language (e.g. in ASL: holds, movements). The parts of language studied in phonology do not have meaning in isolation. English e.g. letters: s-i-t-s; ASL e.g. handshape (flat:o) Morphology is the study of the smallest meaningful units in language, and how language uses these units to build signs (or words). Morpheme: the smallest meaningful unit in a language

16 Morphology Morpheme: the smallest unit of meaning in a language
E.g. happily- English: = happy + ly (often “happily” =NMS attached to sign) E.g ASL= HAPPY + NMS ASL: “careless” from NMS (tongue) English: present progressive -ing

17

18 Morphemes Free Morphemes Bound Morphemes

19 Free Morphemes Morphemes that can occur as independent units, that can occur by themselves English e.g. cat, sit ASL e.g. CAT, LOUSY

20 Bound Morphemes Morphemes that must occur with other morphemes, that cannot occur as independent units English e.g. plural -s- ‘cats’ and third person -s- ‘sits’ ASL e.g. the 3 handshape: THREE-WEEKS and THREE-MONTHS

21 Syntax Syntax: rules for making sentences, based on grammar- word order, etc. Note on Language Assessment/Usage: Competence: what you know about a language, including its syntax Performance: how you use the language (errors, etc.)

22 Sentences Sentences in language are infinite
Finite (limited) set of rules for making sentences Language users know these rules, whether conscious or unconscious

23 Semantics The literal meaning of a sign/word
A chair is a chair is a chair… or is it? Perception influences semantics

24 Semantics: The sense of a word… its literal meaning
Chair Dog

25 Pragmatics Communicating more than what is literally stated or signed
Adds to the semantic meaning Depends on the speaker/signer, addressee, and context Many L2 learners struggle with this; details are often not taught in classes

26 The end--- Tests this six weeks:
1. Friday (tomorrow) – medical signs, sentences A-D 2. Classifier test 3. Written test 4. 1 on 1 conversation- as you are ready (after we practice all parts) Final Exam information: written test (MC/TF), signed portion (video,), 1 on 1 conversation


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