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WHAT IS LANGUAGE?

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WHAT IS LANGUAGE? * BBI 3101 - LECTURE 1 - WHAT IS LANGUAGE? Of course I know what language is. I use it all the time * BBI 3101 - LECTURE 1 - WHAT IS LANGUAGE? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WHAT IS LANGUAGE?


1
WHAT IS LANGUAGE?
2
  • Of course I know what language is. I use it all
    the time

3
What is language?
4
  • Language is a very complex phenomenon.
  • There is both a functional side to language (the
    jobs language does in human society) and there
    is a formal side (the way language is structured)

5
Language is many things
  • It is a system of communication
  • A medium for thought
  • A vehicle for literary expression
  • A social institution
  • A matter for political controversy
  • A factor for nation building
  • All normal human beings speak at least one
    language, and it is hard to imagine much
    significant social or intellectual activity
    taking place in its absence.

6
  • Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols
    used for human communication.
  • (Wardhaugh, 1994)

7
The importance of understanding language  
  • Language is everywhere.
  • It permeates our thoughts, mediates our relations
    with others, and even creeps into our dreams.
  • Most human knowledge and culture is stored and
    transmitted in language, which is so ubiquitous
    that we take it for granted.
  • Without it, however, society as we know it would
    be impossible.

8
The Universals of Language 
  • Characteristics that apply to all known
    languages, everywhere, at any one time, are
    called universal traits.
  • The exact number of such traits will vary
    according to the classifying system used, but
    here we shall discuss five major ones
  •  
  • 1. Language is human.
  • 2. Language is spoken.
  • 3. Language changes in various ways.
  • 4. Language is systematic.
  • 5. Language is symbolic in various ways.
  •  

9
Language is human
  • No species besides homo sapiens appear to use the
    communication system of language in the same way
    that human beings do.
  • Belonging only to human beings, language is
    therefore species specific.
  • Children (with the exceptions of isolated feral
    children and of the physically impaired) do
    acquire language. Some children may use language
    more competently than others for instance,
    children who are severely mentally retarded often
    have severe speech impediments as well.
  • But with the exceptions noted, there is no known
    instance of a human being not using language.
  • Belonging to all human beings, language is
    therefore species universal.
  • To be human is, above all, to speak.

10
Language is spoken
  •  All languages, whether they are now or were ever
    written, were and are first spoken.
  • Children learn to speak long before they are able
    to write and children do not need to be formally
    taught to speak, as they usually do to write.
  • Furthermore, all adult language users speak more
    often, and speak many more utterances, than they
    ever write.

11
Language changes
  •  All languages change in various ways, and any
    language is in a constant, slow, not always
    steady process of alteration.
  • Constructions are dropped or added, old patterns
    combined in new ways, new words coined from old
    parts. This form of change is chronological or
    historical change over time.
  •  
  • In addition to changing over time, all languages
    show variation over space. At any particular
    time, many different versions of the same
    language will be spoken in different regions by
    different types of people. These variations are
    collectively known as dialects.

12
Language is systematic
  • Every language in the world regulates itself,
    fits its units and unit groups together in
    predictable ways, and produces systematically
    intelligible sounds and sentences.
  • No languages systems are more primitive or
    more advanced than any others -- which is to
    say, there is no correlation between the
    technological complexity of a culture and the
    complexity of its language.
  • All languages are complex but regular at all
    levels, from sound to form to sentence.
  •  
  •  
  •   Usually the means or patterns of regulation --
    the systematic structure -- are fairly limited in
    number. For example, depending on the expert you
    talk to, English has about 45 sound patterns and
    about 15 to 30 basic sentence structuring
    (syntactic) patterns.

13
Language is symbolic
  • Words have no inherent, innate, or divinely
    decreed meanings.
  • Words merely stand for, represent, or symbolize
    meaning.
  • The creature we call a whale is not so named
    because whale has some innate connection with
    large, aquatic mammals, but because a majority of
    English speakers use that name.
  • Other language speakers use other names la
    baleine (French), der Walfisch (German), la
    ballena (Spanish).
  • All of these different terms are symbols for the
    creature itself, for the referent-- that is, the
    figure (or idea or action) to which a word
    refers.

14
  • What do you know when you know a language?

15
  • Many people consider knowing a language to be
    the ability to speak that language well.
  • Your linguistics competence is your (mostly
    unconscious) knowledge of the rules of a
    language.
  • This competence differs in significant ways from
    linguistic performance, which is your actual
    speech behaviour.

16
The sound system (phonology)
  •  
  • Part of your competence has to do with the
    phonology of the language.
  • When you hear or attempt to learn a foreign
    language, you become acutely aware that other
    languages have sounds that English does not have
    -- for example, the French r , Spanish or French
    p , the clicks of some African languages, the
    German u and o vowels, and the tones of
    languages like Chinese.

17
Morphology
  • Speech consists of continous utterances.
  • Often there are no physical breaks between words.
  • Yet we can break utterances down into words
    without difficulty.

18
  • For example, (a) can be broken down into (b),
    but no speaker would break it down to (c).
  •  
  • (a) hewenttotownonhishorse
  • (b) he went to town on his horse
  • (c) hew enttot ow nonh ishor se

19
Syntax
  • You can recognize well-formed -- that is,
    grammatical sentences
  •  
  • (a) You up pick at oclock will eight.
  • (b) I will picks you up at eight oclock.
  • (c) I will pick you up at eight oclock.
  •  
  • Only (c) is grammatical (a) is word salad and
    (b) violates the English rule of subject- verb
    agreement.
  •  

20
  • There is an important difference between the
    grammaticality of a sentence-- is it structurally
    well formed? and semantic well-formedness -- does
    it make sense?
  • Below, (d) is structurally well formed but
    semantically odd. Compare (d) through (g).
  •  
  • (d) I just saw a unicorn playing a concerto on
    his horn.
  • (e) Colourless green ideas sleeps furiously.
  • (f) Colourless green ideas sleep furiously.
  • (g) Green furiously colourless sleep ideas.
  •  
  • Both (d) and (f) are grammatical. however, they
    are Semantically peculiar.

21
Semantics
  • Part of your linguistic competence has to do with
    your ability to determine the meaning of
    sentences.
  • But your competence goes beyond this. You can
    determine when a sentence has more than one
    meaning.
  • (a) Jack rolled over Jill.
  • (b) Mary threw up her lunch.
  • (c) Visiting martians can be a nuisance.
  • (d) I saw her duck.
  •  

22
  • You also know when different sentences mean the
    same thing.
  • (a) John is an unmarried male.
  • (b) John is a bachelor.

23
Styles of speech
  • You also understand the contexts or situations in
    which different styles of language may be used.
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