Chibi Captain America

Sabtu, 17 Mei 2014

Introduction to Linguistics


LINGUISTICS
Linguistics (n.) The scientific study of language; also called linguistic science. (David Crystal:2008)
Linguistics is a comparatively new science, or new, at least, in the form it has taken in recent years. 
The science seeks to answer the following questions: 
(a) what exactly do we know when we know a language 
(b) how is this knowledge acquired and 
(c) how is such knowledge used? (Petra)

Langage, Langue & Parole
langage /la/ (n.) A French term introduced by Ferdinand de Saussure to refer to the human biological faculty of speech. (David Crystal:2008)
It is distinguished in his approach from langue, the language system of a speech community.
langue denotes a system of internalised, shared rules governing a national language’s vocabulary, grammar, and sound system;
Parole designates actual oral and written communication by a member or members of a particular speech community.

Contexts in which linguistics arose
philosophy (Greece)
language teaching (Alexandria)
philology (study of ancient texts, often of sacred nature)   (India, Greece)

Cratylus: a Socratic dialogue
Protagonists:
Cratylus: words are natural signs, some names are ‘correct’ others are not
Hermogenes: names are arbitrary/ conventional
Socrates:  middle position: there is such a thing as a correct name, but names may be corrupted, and yet be used

Etymology of theos ‘god’
Socrates: It seems to me that the first inhabitants of Greece believed only in those gods in which many foreigners still believe today – the sun, the moon, earth, stars and sky. And, seeing that these were always moving or running, they gave them the name ‘theoi’ because it was their nature to run (thein).

Modern View (F. de Saussure)
words and expressions are basically conventional: arbitrary by agreement in a speech community
no Humpty-Dumpty
partial motivation of signs possible:
  1. when they are complex
  2. onomatopoetic words
  3. (maybe) sound symbolism
What is language?
       A system of symbols with standard meanings.
       Allows humans to communicate and is the main vehicle of transmission of culture.
       Language provides context for symbolic understanding.

Other Communication
  Human: 
      Direct
     Body language (kinesics), tone of voice, personal space (proxemics), gesture
      Indirect
       Writing, mathematics, music, painting, signs


Nonhuman:
      Sounds, odors, body movements
      Call systems, ethologists
      ASL – American Sign Language

Nonhuman Communication – ASL 
American Sign Language taught to chimps and gorillas
      Physiologically and developmentally similar to humans.
      Chimps taught: Lana, Nim, Kanzi, Washoe
      Gorillas taught: Koko




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