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GK Introduction to Linguistics

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What is strange about the following sentences? Colourless green ideas sleep furiously. ... to describe, not prescribe to record the facts of linguistic diversity, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GK Introduction to Linguistics


1
GK Introduction to Linguistics
  • First session Getting to know

2
Getting to know each otheran absolute essential
for a good course atmosphere
  • In groups of 3 people
  • Introduce yourselves to each other
  • Write on a sheet of paper
  • Your (first) names
  • One thing that the three of you have in common
    (NOT the subject you study!)
  • One thing that could enable someone reading your
    paper to locate your group in this room.

3
How can we study grammar in linguistics?
  • Test your unconscious knowledge of English grammar

4
Lets play odd-one-out!
You will now see two groups of words that do not
exist in English. Nevertheless, you will easily
be able to say which member of the group could
not possibly be an English word, while the others
couldwell be.
5
Find the odd-one out and try to explain in as
much detail as possible why the word could not
possibly be an English word
  • clee,
  • tono,
  • grmpf,
  • cowee,
  • soorot

6
Find the odd-one out and try to explain in as
much detail as possible why the word could not
possibly be an English word
  • To re-clee,
  • a tono-tarian system,
  • a cowee-ist,
  • to soorot-al-ation-ise

7
Create a sentence from the following nonsense
words
  • To re-clee,
  • a tono-tarian system,
  • a cowee-ist,

8
What is strange about the following sentences?
  • Colourless green ideas sleep furiously.
  • Drinnen waren Leute, schweigend ins Gespräch
    vertieft,als ein totgeschossner Hase auf der
    Sandbank Schlittschuh lief.

9
Find a context in which you can actually say
  • Colourless green ideas sleep furiously.

10
You know a lot about the grammar of English
  • Possible sound combinations
  • gt grmpf
  • Possible word structure
  • gt to soorot-al-ation-ise
  • Possible sentence structure
  • gt A tonotarian system a cowee reclee
  • Possible meaning relations
  • gt Colourless green ideas sleep furiously
  • Possible context effects on meaning
  • gt In certain contexts, you CAN meaningfully
    say colourless green ideas sleep furiously

11
You know a lot about the grammar of English
  • Possible sound structure Phonology
  • Possible word structure Morphology
  • Possible sentence structure Syntax
  • Meaning Semantics
  • Interaction between meaning
  • and context in language use Pragmatics
  • the essentials for the description of language
    structure
  • The core disciplines of linguistics

12
What is grammar?, part 2
incorrect or variable?
13
Use your intuition to evaluate the correctness of
the following sentences!
  • I only want to study English.
  • Only I want to study English.
  • I want only to study English.
  • I want to only study English.
  • I want to study only English.
  • I want to study English only.

14
A famous grammatical rule of English
  • Do not split infinitives!

15
BUT This rule is not true (anymore) in English!
  • e.g.
  • The mission of the USS Enterprise is to boldly
    go where noone else has gone before.

16
Note There are also truly ungrammatical
structures
  • I want only to study English.
  • I wants to study English.
  • I want to study English language.

17
Linguistics is descriptive, not prescriptive!
  • It is the task of the grammarian to describe, not
    prescribe to record the facts of linguistic
    diversity, and not to attempt the impossible
    tasks of evaluating language variation or halting
    language change. (David Crystal 1996 4)
  • The custom of speaking is the original and only
    just standard of any language (Joseph Priestley,
    Rudiments of English Grammar, 1761)

18
Methodology of descriptive linguistics
  • Collect data from a language (corpora,
    grammaticality judgements, )
  • Analyse data
  • Find generalisations
  • Formulate generalisations as grammatical rules
  • Test rules
  • Basic Assumptions These rules reflect what
    native speakers unconsciously know about their
    language.
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