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Contemporary Linguistics

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Contemporary Linguistics Chapter 1 Intro to Language All humans are specialized for language Speech organs Mouth teeth, tongue, lips, throat vocal cords, lungs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Contemporary Linguistics


1
Contemporary Linguistics
  • Chapter 1
  • Intro to Language

2
All humans are specialized for language
  • Speech organs
  • Mouthteeth, tongue, lips, throatvocal cords,
    lungsbreathing, nasal cavity
  • Brain(more later in Ch 14) specialized lobes for
    production and reception of spoken and written
    language
  • All human cultures develop spoken language
  • UN definition of a human a primate who uses
    language

3
All languages share
  • Creativity
  • Speakers can use given vocab to say something
    understandable never said before
  • In 2nd grade, I married a giraffe.
  • Grammar
  • All human languages, and all dialects of any
    human language have a grammatical system
  • Change over time
  • If they are still living languages

4
All grammars are equal linguistically!
  • Some grammars are more likely to lead to higher
    paying employment.
  • But all grammars are equally good at conveying
    information to those in that dialect group.
  • Even dialects used by those who cannot read
    standard English are grammatical in that they
    follow their own rules and structure.

5
All grammars are alike in some ways
  • All human languages have more consonant than
    vowel sounds
  • All human languages have words for what people do
    (verbs) and for things (nouns)
  • Any language with a /f/ also has an /s/
  • All languages have the vowel /?/
  • Most languages fall into two patterns
  • S-V-O as in John ate the burger
  • S-O-V as in he his swin heolde (OE) for he his
    pigs held.

6
Subconscious grammar
  • It is easier to see this if you have ever tried
    to explain a rule of English to a non-native
    speaker!
  • For example, whenever a native speaker of English
    has multiple adjectives, he will put last the
    adjective that is also a noun.
  • yellow brick road never brick yellow road
  • American English speakers go to school but to
    the hospital, and British English speakers go
    to school and to hospital. They also wait
    on line while we American wait in line.

7
Prescriptive vs. Descriptive
  • A prescriptive linguist, or grammarian, or
    dictionary writer PRESCRIBES correct usage for
    others
  • Very 18th C!
  • A descriptive linguist, grammarian, or dictionary
    writer DESCRIBES what native speakers are
    actually doing to get their meanings across to
    one another
  • Very modern!
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