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Linguistics 1

The document provides an introduction to language and linguistics, defining language and its characteristics, such as arbitrariness, duality, and creativity. It explores various theories regarding the origins of language and outlines core branches of linguistics, including phonology, morphology, and sociolinguistics. Additionally, it discusses the practical applications of linguistics and the relationship between language and society.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views65 pages

Linguistics 1

The document provides an introduction to language and linguistics, defining language and its characteristics, such as arbitrariness, duality, and creativity. It explores various theories regarding the origins of language and outlines core branches of linguistics, including phonology, morphology, and sociolinguistics. Additionally, it discusses the practical applications of linguistics and the relationship between language and society.

Uploaded by

senthil
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Unit Five: Part 1

– Dr. S. Vasu

Professor Academy College TRB


Chennai English

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Today’s Class

Language and Linguistics:


An Introduction

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Language:
Definition and division

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Defining Language
The expression of ideas by means
of speech-sounds combined into
words. Words are combined into
sentences, this combination
answering to that of ideas into
thoughts.
– Henry Sweet

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Aside: Prof. Henry Higgins

Ovid’s
Metamorphoses
Pygmalion
of Cyprus
Galatea

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The languages of the world
The 19th-c. scholar Wilhelm von Humboldt:
Three types
1. Inflectional — Latin
2. Agglutinative — Swahili, Turkish, [Tamil]
3. Isolating — Chinese
(any language with no
morphology)
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Language:
Characteristic Features

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Acquisition (Cultural transmission)
First language (L1):
a person’s ‘mother tongue’
or ‘native language’
Second language (L2):
any language learned after
one has learnt one’s
mother tongue
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Arbitrariness
No logical connection between
the sound and the meaning
Symbols or sounds: arbitrary
D-O-G?
An established system:
Follow the conventions
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Aside: The Father of Modern Linguistics

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Duality (double articulation)
Organized at two levels simultaneously
Distinct sounds: individual sounds
n, i , p
(no intrinsic meaning)
Distinct meanings: combination of sounds
nip / pin
(difference of meaning)

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Displacement
To talk about things other than the here and now
Open-endedness:
to use language to say anything at all,
(things we’ve never said or heard before)
Last night’s cricket match
The launch of a satellite next week
The spread of Covid-19 in Europe
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Reflexivity
The use of language
to think and
talk about
language itself

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Creativity (productivity)
Coming up with novel utterances
The potential number of utterances:
infinite . . .

A day of ‘dating’!

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Language:
The Origins

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1. The Divine Source
God presents humans with language.
Experiments:
the original divine language?
If human babies were allowed
to grow up without hearing
any language around them . . .

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An Egyptian pharaoh’s experiment
2,500 years ago: Psammetichus
Two newborn babies
in isolation for two years
goats and a mute shepherd
Phrygian (in Turkey) word:
bekos (bread)

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The year 1500
King James
the Fourth of Scotland:
The children: Hebrew
(the Garden of Eden)
But, in similar experiments:
the children: dumb

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The 16th Century
The Mogul emperor
Akbar the Great:
a similar experiment!
The children:
nothing at all.

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2. The Natural Sound Source
Primitive words: imitations of natural sounds
CAW-CAW, COO-COO . . .
a) The “bow-wow theory”:
Onomatopoeia —
splash, bang, boom,
rattle, buzz, hiss,
screech . . .
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b) The Pooh-pooh theory:
Natural interjections —
disgust (Pooh! Yuck!)
surprise (Oh! Wow!)
pain (Ouch!) . . .

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c) The Ding-dong theory: Max Müller
Sound symbolism: responding to
rhymical movements in
the immediate environment

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3. The Social Interaction Source
The “yo-he-ho” theory: the sounds (grunts, hums)
physical tasks communally

Rhythmical grunts Chants

Chants Speech

Apes (in social groups)!

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4. The Physical Adaptation Source
Physical features: speech production
Upright teeth —
/ f / or / v /
Flexible lips —
/ p / or / b /
Vocal cords —
/h/
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5. The Tool-Making Source
Left hemisphere of the brain:
tool-making (stone and wood tools)
manual gestures —
a precursor of language
Complex vocalization (speaking)
Object manipulation (tool-making)
— close to each other

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6. The Genetic Source
Innateness hypothesis:
Noam Chomsky
special capacity for language
(LAD)
Children born deaf:
fluent sign language users

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Other theories
The la-la theory:
(the sing-song theory)
Otto Jespersen
Need to express affection:
emotion-inspired music
and poetry

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The ta-ta theory:
Sounds that naturally
accompany physical
gestures
‘the Gesture theory’:
Advanced by: Wilhelm Wundt
Re-stated by: Richard Paget
(in Human Speech)
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Linguistics:
An Introduction

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1. Pronunciation of these words

Tyrant
Tyranny
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1. Pronunciation
of these words
Tyrant
/ˈtaɪərənt /
Tyranny
/ˈtɪrəni /
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English: a non-phonetic language
Suit — / suːt /
Suite — / swiːt /
Steal — / stiːl /
Stealth — / stelθ /
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Foot — / fʊt /
Food — / fuːd /

Grieve — / ɡriːv /
Sieve — / sɪv /

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2. A few words with this base

-wright
(a worker)
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2. A few words with this base
-wright
playwright
cheesewright
wheelwright
shipwright
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(to speak)
-loqui
a) soliloquy [n]
b) colloquial [adj.]
c) loquacious [adj.]

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Foreign roots
ventriloquist [n.]
venter
+ loqui
+ ist
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3. Grammatical error in this sentence

Hardly I go to college.

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3. Grammatical error in
this sentence
Hardly I go to college.
I hardly go to college.
Hardly do I go to college.

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I am having a car.
I have a car.

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State verbs
Temporary state: stative
I feel happy.
I think I will postpone it.
Temporary situation: dynamic
I’m not feeling well.
I’m thinking about it.
I’m having lunch / a party / a great time.

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4. The meaning of this word

Automated Teller Machine

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4. The meaning of this word

Automated
Teller Machine
Tell = count

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Fossil
மயிர்
மயிரிழையில்
by a hair’s breadth

மயிர்க்கூச்செறி
to get goosebumps
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5. The part of speech of ‘slow’
Traffic sign:

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5. The part of speech of ‘slow’

Traffic sign:
Adverb

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Everyday contexts
Temporary situation: dynamic

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Linguistics:
Definitions

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‘the scientific study
of language’
Objective approach:
Its investigation by means of
controlled and empirically
verifiable observations and with
reference to some general theory
of language-structure

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‘the systematic study
of language’

Basic questions:
What is language?
How does language work?

Linguistics is descriptive,
not prescriptive.

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Core Branches of Linguistics
1. Tyrant — Phonology
2. -wright — Morphology
3. Hardly . . . — Syntax
4. Teller — Semantics
5. Go slow — Pragmatics

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Core Branches of Linguistics
1. Speech sounds — Phonology
2. Word formation — Morphology
3. Sentence structures — Syntax
4. Meaning — Semantics
5. Language in use — Pragmatics

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The Scope
of
Linguistics

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Macro Branches
of Linguistics

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1. Applied linguistics
The practical use of linguistics:
translation, lexicography, ELT . . .
graphology
The study of handwriting.
GRAPHEMICS, GRAPHETICS.
Encyclopedia of the Written Word. A Lexicon
for Graphology and Other Aspects of Writing
(K.G.Roman/R.Wolfson & M.Edwards),
New York NY, 1968.

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2. Language Acquisition
The process whereby children become
speakers of their native language
Cooing: an infant’s initial use of sounds
1st months: high vowels [iː], [uː]
4th month: velar consonants [k], [ɡ]
Babbling: consonant-vowel combinations
6th & 8th months: ba-ba-ba, ga-ga-ga

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3. Sociolinguistics
The study of the relationship between
language and society
Register:
choosing your language
to suit your audience
1. Formal register
2. Informal register
3. Jargon

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4. Neurolinguistics
The study of the relationship between language
and the human brain
The left hemisphere:
language abilities;
any damage –
language disabilities

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5. Historical Linguistics
The study of language change and language families
Philology:
The study of the changes in
a single language across time
Old English to
Middle English to
Modern English

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6. Corpus Linguistics
The compilation and analysis of corpora
Corpus: a large body of texts stored
in an electronic database

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7. Computational Linguistics
The use of computers to elucidate
linguistic problems

Speech recognition:

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8. Forensic Linguistics
The examination of
linguistic data that
forms the evidence
in the court

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9. Philosophical Linguistics
(Philosophy of Language)
The study of the relationship between language
and logical thought
The German logician Gottlob Frege: Presupposition
— an extra and assumed meaning attached to the
basic meaning of utterances
Proposition A: ‘He has stopped stealing.’
Proposition B: ‘He has been stealing.’

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10. Stylistics

The study of language and literature

Prolepsis:
So the two brothers with their murdered man
Rode past fair Florence
– Keats’s Isabella, or the Pot of Basil

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