Basic Concepts of Language and Linguistics
Basic Concepts of Language and Linguistics
Basic Concepts of Language and Linguistics
Linguistics
1.
2.
3.
Speech vs Writing
3.1
Why it is some times claimed that writing
is primary
Written texts tend to br more carefully worded and
better organized than spoken texts
They contain fower errors, hesitations, and incomplete
sentence, because writing is usually planned in
advance, is subject to fewer time contraints, is
proofread, etv.
However: how about instants messeging, quick e-mails?
Spelling is more uniform across different individuals and
places using the same language than is pronunciation.
However: UK: tyre, draught, colour, dialogue, penalise,
centre, defence, . .
USA: tire, draft, color, dialogue, penalize, center,
defense, . . .
Moreover: Is uniformity the same as primacy?
Written texts last and can be preserved for a long time.
However: CDs, tapes, . . . can preserve speech
3.2
Linguistics reasons for claiming that
speech
There are many societies which only speak their
language and do not write it. And no society uses only a
written language (with no spoken form).
Historically, spoken language existed much earlier than
writing. Writing was invented in Sumer (Mesopotamia,
current Iraq) about 6000 years ago.
We learn to speak before we learn to write.
Most people say more during one month than they
write during their entire lives.
Writing must be taught, whereas spoken language is
acquired automatically
Psycholinguistic evidence suggest that the processing
and production of written language is overlaid on the
spoken language centers in the brain (plus certain other
centers).
Speech contains information that writing lacks:
intonation, stress, voice quality . . .
4.
Another example:
1) Mouse escaped.
2) The mouse the cat was chasing escaped.
3) The mouse the cat the dog barked at was chasing
escaped.
.
.
.
Performance point of view: terrible
Competence point of view: unproblematic
5.
Descriptive vs. Prescriptive Approach
to Language
5.1
Descriptive Approach
Linguists attempt to describe the grammar of the
language that exists in the minds of its speakers, i.e. to
create a model of speakers' mental grammar.
The resulting descriptive grammar describes person's
basic linguistic knowledge. It explains how it is possible
to speak and understand and it summarize what
speakers know about the sounds, words, phrases and
sentences of their language.
Creating a descriptive grammar involves observing the
language and trying to discover the principles or rules
that govern it.
5.2
Prescriptive Approach
Prescriptivists tell you someone's idea of what is good"
or bad".
Prescriptive rules make a value judgment about the
correctness of certain utterances and generally try to
enforce a single standard. For example:
o Don't split in nitives; don't say: to easily
understand
o Don't end a sentence with a preposition; don't say
Where are you from?
o Don't use me in a subject of a sentence; don't say
You and me went to the store.
o Don't use ain't; don't say Ain't it the truth?
The people who prescriptive grammar make up the
rules of the grammar.
They attempt to impose the rules for speaking and
writing on people without much regard for what the
speakers of a language actually say and write.
So-called prescriptive grammar usually focuses only on
a few issues and leaves the rest of a language
undescribed (unprescribed?). In fact, from the linguistic
point of view, this is not grammar at all.
5.3
6.
6.1
6.2
Morphology
6.3
Syntax
6.4
Semantics
6.5
Pragmatics
7.
Arbitrarines (Conventionality)
7.1
Limited Exceptions: Onomatop oeia and
Sound Symbolism
7.2