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Linguistics Intro

  1. What is Language?

    • external: social concept

    • internal: cognitive concept

  2. Languages in the World

    • language is used by communities

    • counting languages

      • language or dialect?

      • political factors - government, national borders

      • mutual intelligibility - same language ➝ understanding

      • speaker’s own determination

        • mutually intelligible, but speakers say they are two different languages

      • documentation of languages in the area

      • linguists count languages by their grammar

        • sounds, pronunciation rules, syntax, vocab, etc.

      • counting helps determine ecology / vitality

      • macrolanguage: covers many dialects and languages (ex: chinese)

    • endangerment

      • about 2/5 of languages are endangered bc of globalization

      • UNESCO

      • three generation shift

        • oldest generation (monolingual) speakers die

        • middle generation becomes multilingual

        • youngest generation doesn’t learn first language

    • summary: linguists study languages for description, documentation, teaching, and preservation efforts

  3. Language in the Mind

    • Ferdinand de Saussure

      • Langue: language competence, abstract knowledge. like rules of a game

      • Parole: language performance, use of language. playing the game. creates variation and fluency

    • Child Language Acquisition

      • children are biologically and neurologically predisposed to acquire the language they hear

      • 0-5 yrs: figuring out system of grammar

      • Noam Chomsky: LAD

  4. The Communication Chain

    • Phonetics: study of speech sounds in articulation, acoustics, and audition

    • Phonology: study of speech patterns

    • Morphology: study of internal structure of words and word-formation processes

    • Syntax: deals with word order

    • Semantics: individual word meanings and sentence-level meanings

    • Pragmatics: how language is used on a practical level and how semantic meanings change in context

    • Sociolinguistics: regional and social dialects

A

Linguistics Intro

  1. What is Language?

    • external: social concept

    • internal: cognitive concept

  2. Languages in the World

    • language is used by communities

    • counting languages

      • language or dialect?

      • political factors - government, national borders

      • mutual intelligibility - same language ➝ understanding

      • speaker’s own determination

        • mutually intelligible, but speakers say they are two different languages

      • documentation of languages in the area

      • linguists count languages by their grammar

        • sounds, pronunciation rules, syntax, vocab, etc.

      • counting helps determine ecology / vitality

      • macrolanguage: covers many dialects and languages (ex: chinese)

    • endangerment

      • about 2/5 of languages are endangered bc of globalization

      • UNESCO

      • three generation shift

        • oldest generation (monolingual) speakers die

        • middle generation becomes multilingual

        • youngest generation doesn’t learn first language

    • summary: linguists study languages for description, documentation, teaching, and preservation efforts

  3. Language in the Mind

    • Ferdinand de Saussure

      • Langue: language competence, abstract knowledge. like rules of a game

      • Parole: language performance, use of language. playing the game. creates variation and fluency

    • Child Language Acquisition

      • children are biologically and neurologically predisposed to acquire the language they hear

      • 0-5 yrs: figuring out system of grammar

      • Noam Chomsky: LAD

  4. The Communication Chain

    • Phonetics: study of speech sounds in articulation, acoustics, and audition

    • Phonology: study of speech patterns

    • Morphology: study of internal structure of words and word-formation processes

    • Syntax: deals with word order

    • Semantics: individual word meanings and sentence-level meanings

    • Pragmatics: how language is used on a practical level and how semantic meanings change in context

    • Sociolinguistics: regional and social dialects