Lecture 2 What Is Linguistics. Definition of linguistics Branches of linguistics Macrolinguistics...

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Transcript of Lecture 2 What Is Linguistics. Definition of linguistics Branches of linguistics Macrolinguistics...

Lecture 2 Lecture 2 What Is Linguistics

Definition of linguistics Branches of linguistics Macrolinguistics Important distinctions in linguistics

DefinitionLinguistics is the scientific study of

language.= Looking at patterns and systems

in language.

Branches of linguisticsPhoneticsPhonologyMorphologySyntaxSemanticsPragmatics

PhoneticsPhonetics is the study of speech

sounds.(Refer to handout)

PhonologyPhonology studies the sound system

of languages. The aim of phonology is to demonstrate the patterns of distinctive sounds found in a language, and to make as general statements as possible about the nature of sound systems in the languages of the world. The object of study in phonology is phoneme.

MorphologyMorphology studies the formation of

words, that is, how words are formed from smaller units of meaning – morphemes. Morphemes are the minimal units of meaning. They can be used to derive words and to give grammatical information about a word.

Languages differ in their degree of dependence on morphological components.

English: Boy: I’m a student. Girl: I’m a student. Boys: We’re students. Girls: We’re students.French: Garçon: Je suis étudiant. Fille: Je suis étudiante. Garçons: Nous sommes étudiants. Filles: Nous sommes étudiantes.

SyntaxSyntax studies the rules that govern the

formation of sentences from words. These rules specify word order, sentence organization, and the relationship between word order, word classes and other sentence elements.

Emma loaded the groceries into the car.

Emma loaded the car with groceries.

SemanticsSemantics is the study of meaning. It’s not only concerned with the

meaning of words, but also that of morphemes and of sentences.

PragmaticsPragmatics is the study of meaning

in context. It deals with specific utterances in

specific situations.

MacrolinguisticsPsycholinguistics linguistics and psychology

Sociolinguistics– language and society

Applied linguistics - linguistics and language teaching

Psycholinguistics • Psycholinguistics studies the correlation

between linguistic behavior and the psychological processes thought to underlie that behavior: (a) the mental process that a person uses in producing and understanding language, and (b) how humans learn language.

• cognitive linguistics• the study of language development in the

child

Sociolinguistics• Sociolinguistics studies all aspects of

the relationship between language and society. It includes studies on the social functions of language and the social characteristics of its users. = change in language due to social conditions.

Applied linguistics

• In the broad sense, applied linguistics is concerned with the application of linguistic theories and findings to the clarification and solution of language problems which have arisen in other areas of experience.

• But the most well-developed branch of applied linguistics the teaching and learning of foreign languages.

• = This is what we are doing!

Anthropological linguistics• This is a branch that studies language

variation and use in relation to the cultural patterns and beliefs of man, as investigated using the theories and methods of anthropology.

• Did English and German diverge from a common ancestral language? If they are related, how far back in time did they begin to differ?

• = Etymology

Competence and performance Competence---- a person’s knowledge of his

language, the system of rules which he has mastered so that he is able to produce and understand an indefinite number of sentences, and to recognize grammatical mistakes and ambiguities.

Performance---the actual realization of language knowledge, language seen as a set of specific utterances produced by language speakers, as encountered in a corpus.

D. H. Hymes: communicative competenceM. A. K. Halliday: Linguistic potential and actual

linguistic behavior

Formalism or formal linguistics • The study of the abstract forms of

language and their internal relations.• It fixes on the forms of languages as

evidence of the universals without considering how these forms function in communication and the ways of social life in different communities.

• Representative: Noam Chomsky, Transformational-generative grammar (universal grammar)

Activity:• Using the information given

produce your own poster to illustrate aspects of Linguistics and your understanding of it.

• Finish this off for homework!