Language and Linguistics

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is Linguistics? Anthropology studies human beings in the round Linguistics studies language in all its forms. Description of languages Theory of Language.
Advertisements

Why study grammar? Knowledge of grammar facilitates language learning
The nature of Sign and sign/symbol distinction
The properties of language. Introduction All creatures are capable of communicating with other members of their species. However, only the human creature.
Introduction to Linguistics and Basic Terms
EngL 3601: Analysis of the English Language and Culture.
Hello, Everyone!.
Generative Grammar(Part ii)
TOPIC 2: Some Basic Concepts
Sociolinguistics.
The Langue/Parole distinction`
Language and Linguistics
LINGUISTIC Teguh Eko Setio. Essence of linguistics Linguistics is the scientific study of natural language. Someone who engage in this study is called.
Human Language.
Linguistics and Language
What is linguistics  It is the science of language.  Linguistics is the systematic study of language.  The field of linguistics is concerned with the.
Lecture 2 What Is Linguistics.
Language and Communication Part 1. Learning Objectives for Language and Communication Unit  1. Identify key structures of language  2. Identify what.
Invitation to linguistics By Shao Chunyan. What is language? Human speech The ability to communicate by this means A system of vocal sounds and combinations.
The founding fathers Ferdinand Saussure Charles S. Peirce.
SPEECH AND WRITING. Spoken language and speech communication In a normal speech communication a speaker tries to influence on a listener by making him:
Linguistics The third week. Chapter 1 Introduction 1.3 Some Major Concepts in Linguistics.
I. INTRODUCTION.
SEMIOTICS INTRODUCTION SUSI YULIAWATI, M.HUM.. Definition Semiotics is the study of signs. Semiotics concerned with everything that can be taken as a.
WHAT IS LINGUISTICS? MGTER RAMON GUERRA. Each human language is a complex of knowledge and abilities enabling speakers of the language to communicate.
Chapter 3 Culture and Language. Chapter Outline  Humanity and Language  Five Properties of Language  How Language Works  Language and Culture  Social.
HYMES (1964) He developed the concept that culture, language and social context are clearly interrelated and strongly rejected the idea of viewing language.
Lecture 1 Lec. Maha Alwasidi. Branches of Linguistics There are two main branches: Theoretical linguistics and applied linguistics Theoretical linguistics.
Introduction Language and Linguistics. Preview Introduction: importance of language Communication systems Functions of language Universal properties of.
Universal properties of language From An Introduction to Language and Linguistics (Fasold & Connor-Linton (editors), 2006, Yule, 2003)
WHAT IS LANGUAGE?. 4 The study of language (linguistics) may treat a language as a self- contained system; or it may treat it as an object that varies.
What is Linguistics? «… window to understanding the brain» Pinker. S.( 2012)  Linguistics studies the language(s) – The way how language works language.
Linguistic Anthropology
INTRODUCTION TO APPLIED LINGUISTICS
Chapter 1 Invitations to Linguistics Course: Linguistics Lecturer: Phoenix Xu Date: 9/6/2007.
Introduction Language and Linguistics. Preview Introduction: importance of language Communication systems Functions of language Universal properties of.
Applied Linguistics Applied Linguistics means
Language and Linguistics An Introduction. Brief Introduction  Language  A human speech;  The ability to communicate;  A system of vocal sounds; 
Plato’s Cratylus 2 distinct views A) – Language is natural B) - Language is conventional.
Text Linguistics. Definition of linguistics Linguistics can be defined as the scientific or systematic study of language. It is a science in the sense.
Language and Linguistics
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION
Use of Literature in Language Teaching
Submitted by – PARNASHREE PAUL B.ED 1ST SEMESTER ROLL NO. - 33
Introduction to English Linguistics
Chapter 2 First Language Acquisition
An Introduction to Linguistics
Linguistics Linguistics can be defined as the scientific or systematic study of language. It is a science in the sense that it scientifically studies the.
Chapter 7 Verbal Intercultural Communication
Syntax 1 Introduction.
Introduction to Contemporary Linguistics
Language and Culture.
Lecture # 30 Review of lectures 8-14.
Enrico Grazzi Lingua e Traduzione Inglese I LCMC 6 Cfu A.A
INTRODUCTION TO LINGUISTICS 1
What is linguistics?.
Module One: Foundations of Linguistics and The Study of Language
Language is the capacity that distinguishes humans from all the other creatures. - the most sophisticated and most important feature  - the most uniquely.
LANGUAGE AND COMMUNICATION
CHAPTER 5 This chapter introduces students to the study of linguistics. It discusses the basic categories and definitions used to study language, and the.
Introduction to.
Language in Context Week 1 Introduction.
Macrolinguistics Linguistics is not the only field concerned with language. Other disciplines such as psychology, sociology, ethnography, the science of.
Ch. 2 Fundamental Concepts in Semiotics Part One
Introduction to Linguistics
Language and Linguistics
The Ethnography of Communication ( EC )
Linguistic Anthropology
What is language?.
What is sociolinguistics?
Presentation transcript:

Language and Linguistics Introduction Language and Linguistics

Preview Introduction: importance of language Communication systems Functions of language Universal properties of language Definitions of language Approaches to the study of language

Importance of language A means to pass a record of what has happened from one generation to the next through stories and sagas, even before written records Development of tools to meet a broad range of needs – impossible without language

Importance of language Capacity for self-awareness and abstract thought – dependent on language The ability to transfer complex information, to discuss the meaning of events and outcomes of alternative actions, to share feelings and ideas – impossible without language

Questions for discussion What is communication? Which communication systems can you think of? What are the basic elements of communication? Are we the only beings capable of communication? Is communication always verbal?

Questions for discussion What distinguishes human from animal communication? Why is context important for communication? What types of context can you think of?

Communication Communication – transfer of information Sign – a basic unit of communication Sign – sth that stands for sth else (referent) to communicate it (communicate = to make sth common)

What is a sign?

Sign

Semiotic triangle

Semantic Triangle

Communication sign communication human animal

Communication verbal natural non-verbal (gestures, etc.) human artificial (street signs)

Basic elements of communication Sender: sends the message Channel: the medium used to transmit the message Receiver: reconstructs the message Feedback

Communication

Code Sender intentionally produces a sign for the recipient How can the recipient interpret the sign? Code – a set of signs, determined by convention, that provides the rules of interpretation All communication systems - codes

Code For successful communication, the code has to be shared The lack of a common code – a recurring issue in the area of language and law

Context Needed for communication over and above the code Co-present communication brings its own context i.e. the surrounding space (deictics)

Context Immediate verbal context Situational context Socio-cultural context

Answer the following: What are the main functions of language? What are the main properties of language? What is linguistics? Can you mention some branches of linguistics?

Functions of language R. Jakobson’s classification Message Sender-Receiver Channel Channel (contact) Phatic f. Sender (emotive or expressive f.) Message (poetic f.) Code (metalinguistic f.) Context Referential f.) Receiver (conative f.)

Language functions Emotive (expressive)-expresses the speaker’s feelings (“What a surprise!”) Referential – information about external reality Conative – making the recipient act in a particular way (“Open the window!”) Phatic – establishing contact (“Hello!”) Poetic – focuses on the message (Carl Sandburg: “The fog comes in on little cat feet”; metaphor) Metalinguistic – focuses on the code “What’s the subject of this sentence?”

Properties of language Multifunctionality Freedom from stimulus Distancing Social transferability Transferability of medium

Multifunctionality of language Expresses thought Transmits information Initiates, maintains and regulates cooperative activities and social relationships Expresses feelings and states of mind Resolves problems Creates possible worlds

Freedom from stimulus Language – independent from stimuli, i.e. external aspects of a situation Distinguishes human from animal language Human verbal messages – free, no deterministic aspect

Distancing The possibility to formulate messages which are distant in space and time – characteristic of human language as opposed to animal communication

Social transferability Anthropologically, any language is socially and culturally transmitted Any human being acquires at least one language (mother tongue) and can learn other languages Innate language faculty: universal properties of language – empty slots filled by material provided by the environment

Transferability of medium: spoken and written Primacy of the spoken language: Ontogenetic (a child first learns to speak) Filogenetic (writing developed much later in human history) Social primacy of the written language in modern societies (higher cultural prestige; science, education, law)

Universal properties of language Although languages differ in many ways, they are made possible by the same genetic information, processed in the brain in the same ways and they share some fundamental features and structural characteristics Understanding and explaining the properties which are universal to all languages, as well as those which vary across languages – task of general linguistics

Universal properties of language Arbitrariness Modularity Compositionality and recursion Discreteness Productivity Reliance on context Variability

Arbitrariness the relationship between the form (the sounds / words / letters / characters) that we use has no natural/meaningful relationship with their meaning, therefore this relationship (between form and meaning) is said to be arbitrary.

Modularity Language – a modular system: produced and interpreted by using a set of component subsystems (or modules) in a coordinated way Different regions of the brain – associated with different aspects of language processing

Modularity Production and interpretation of speech sounds – phonetics Words and their structure – morphology Structure of sentences – syntax Lexicon – interacting with these properties Meaning – semantics Discourse - organization of language beyond the sentence

Compositionality and recursion Languages – organized into constituents, allowing simpler structures to build increasingly complex units

Compositionality: examples She sat down. The smart woman sat down. The tall, dark-haired, smart woman with the bright red sweater and pearl necklace sat down.

Recursion Property of language which allows grammatical processes to be applied repeatedly, combining constituents to produce and infinite variety of sentences of indefinite length

Recursion Profound implications – noone can learn a language by memorizing all the sentences of that language, so there must be another explanation for how human beings are able to learn them The human brain – finite, but recursiveness means that it is capable of producing and understanding an infinite number of sentences

Productivity Language can always produce messages that have never been produced before Infinite combinations of basic units whose number is limited Rule-based creativity: infinite productivity based on a limited number of principles and rules

Discretness Units of language are not continuous; there is a limit between one element and the next

Discreteness Language – composed of sounds, words, sentences etc. The fact that we hear speech as a sequence of individual sounds, words and sentences – incredible accomplishment Children in the first year or two learn to pick out words from the stream of speech with no instruction

Reliance on context Pronounciation of one and won: the same sequence of sounds can represent different concepts in the same language The meaning of a sentence depends on the context in which it is uttered The context: sentence or sentences which precede it, or the broader physical or social circumstances in which the sentence is uttered

Reliance on context: examples It’s cold in here – could be a complaint, a request to close the window, or even a compliment Languages rely on the connection between form (what is said) and context (when, where, by whom, and to whom it is said) to communicate much more than is contained in a sequence of words.

Variability The language people use varies depending on who’s speaking and the situation in which they are speaking Variation – essence of information Variability of language – indexical Speakers vary the language they use to signal their social identities (geographical, social status, ethnicity, gender) and also to define the immediate speech situation

Variability People show who they are by the variety of language they use - they reveal their geographical origin and social status. They signal membership in a range of overlapping social groups: male or female, teenager or adult, member of an ethic group, etc.

Variability People also use language variation to communicate the situation and purpose in which they are talking, as well as the roles they are playing in those situations

Definition of language Language is a) a code B) which organizes a system of signs which are C) primarily phonic-acoustic D) fundamentally arbitrary F) capable of expressing anything G) possessed as interiorized knowledge which allows to produce infinite sentences starting from a limited number of elements

General principles for the analysis of language Synchronic and diachronic approach Langue et parole Paradigmatic and syntagmatic axis Levels of analysis

The descriptive approach Language – universal characteristic of human beings All languages (and language varieties) – equal Language varieties differ because over time they have adapted to differing needs of their speech communities Each language – equally functional in meeting the communicative needs of its speech community

Standard languages vs other varieties the language variety of the dominant group is often perceived as having higher status as well, especially if speaking it affords increased access to power or wealth; language varieties spoken by the less powerful groups – often stigmatized as “incorrect” or “bad” language

The descriptive approach Linguists take language as they find it, rather than attempting to regulate it in the direction of preconceived criteria

Approaches to the study of language Synchronic – diachronic Langue – parole Paradigmatic - syntagmatic

Synchronic and diachronic study Syn (‘with’) + chronos (‘time’) Dia (‘across’) + chronos Diachrony – study of language over time (history) Synchrony – study of language at a definite moment in time Two approaches - complementary

Langue et parole Distinction between the abstract system (langue) and its concrete realization (parole): Ferdinand de Saussure System and use (Louis Hjelmslev) Competence and performance (Noam Chomsky)

Langue et parole Langue (system, competence) – a set of interiorized rules of a language that constitute our capacity to produce messages in a certain language; abstract, unconscious competence shared by all members of a linguistic community Parole – individual linguistic act, concrete realization of a message in a particular language

Langue et parole Langue et parole: opposition between the abstract, social and constant on the one hand (langue) and concrete, individual and variable on the other (parole)

Paradigmatic and syntagmatic axis Paradigmatic axis concerns relations on the level of the system, syntagmatic axis concerns relations on the level of structures that realize the potentialities of the system Paradigmatic and syntagmatic dimensions constitute a double perspective according to which the structures, combinations of linguistic signs, function

Paradigmatic and syntagmatic axis Paradigmatic axis

Levels of analysis Phonetics and phonology Morphology Syntax Semantics

External world cognitively codified Levels of analysis Physical reality Phonetics and phonology Morphology Syntax Lexicon and semantics External world cognitively codified

Levels of analysis Phonetics and phonology, semantics – link with external reality Phonetics – physical support to communication Semantics: conceptualisation and cognitive categorisation of our world

Levels of analysis Morphology and syntax – internal levels on which the system is organised according to the principles that govern the language faculty

Branches of linguistics General linguistics Historical linguistics Language acquisition Sociolinguistics Psycholinguistics Cognitive linguistics Computational linguistics Corpus linguistics Applied linguistics (foreign language learning, LSP, translation studies, forensic linguistics etc.)

Summary Communication systems Functions of language Universal properties of language Study of language: linguistics