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  • Slide 1
  • Introduction to Linguistics Fakry Hamdani
  • Slide 2
  • 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)
  • Slide 3
  • Langage, Langue & Parole langage /lFap/ (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 languages vocabulary, grammar, and sound system; Parole designates actual oral and written communication by a member or members of a particular speech community.
  • Slide 4
  • Contexts in which linguistics arose philosophy (Greece) language teaching (Alexandria) philology (study of ancient texts, often of sacred nature) (India, Greece)
  • Slide 5
  • 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
  • Slide 6
  • 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).
  • Slide 7
  • 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
  • Slide 8
  • Study of human language
  • Slide 9
  • The interdisciplinary nature of modern Linguistics
  • Slide 10
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  • Slide 12
  • Determining Sincerity In an essay that looks at media coverage in the aftermath of the death of Princess Diana on 31 August 1997, Martin Montgomery discusses ways in which audiences constructed their own ideas about the sincerity of what they saw and heard on radio and television. The essay examines ways in which members of the British public reacted to the three highest-profile tributes broadcast by the BBC in the days following Dianas death.
  • Slide 13
  • The first of these was a television interview given by Tony Blair. Standing in the open air, Blair spoke without notes direct to camera, his voice trembling and hesitant with emotion. On 5 September came the second major broadcast, a speech to the nation by the Queen. She expressed her sadness at the death of her daughter-in-law and declared that she was speaking as your Queen and as a grandmother. This broadcast was made live, using a teleprompter and showed the Queen composed and speaking clearly and fluently.
  • Slide 14
  • The third speech analyzed was the address by Dianas brother, the Earl Spencer, at her funeral service in Westminster Abbey, when he pledged that her blood family would do all they could to raise her sons as she would have wished and appeared to be on the verge of breaking down in tears towards the end of his oration.
  • Slide 15
  • 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.
  • Slide 16
  • 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
  • Slide 17
  • 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
  • Slide 18
  • Nonhuman Communication - Washoe Born 1965 Taught ASL 1966 Mastered 100s of signs First nonhuman to learn language
  • Slide 19
  • Nonhuman Communication - Lana Taught with keyboard, 1970s Able to use and combine signs
  • Slide 20
  • Nonhuman Communication - Koko 1970s, first gorilla taught ASL IQ of 85 at 4 years old Koko learning ASL Koko on AOL
  • Slide 21
  • Nonhuman Communication Nim Chimpsky 1980s taught ASL Wouldnt initiate conversation Never signed to other chimps Nim Chimpsky and his namesake, the famed linguist Noam Chomsky
  • Slide 22
  • Nonhuman Communication - Kanzi 1980s, communicates with lexigrams Vocabulary of 90 symbols Could understand English Command of syntax
  • Slide 23
  • Nonhuman Communication Jane Goodall Gombe Game Reserve Chimps need stimulus to make sounds Since 1960s
  • Slide 24
  • Animal v. Human Communication Four differences: Productivity (infinite expressions) Displacement (past, present, future) Arbitrariness (no link between word and sound) Combining sounds (phonemes) Dime versus dine or lock versus rock in English English has 45 phonemes; Italian 27; Hawaiian 13 Nonhuman animals cannot combine sounds (1:1 correspondence of sounds)
  • Slide 25
  • Anatomy of Language Brain Size Laterality Wernickes area Brocas area Motor cortex Motor cortex
  • Slide 26
  • Anatomy of Language Respiratory System Larger lung capacity Larynx, pharynx Tongue, lips, nose Hyoid
  • Slide 27
  • Structure of Language Phonology (sounds) Morphology (words) Syntax (sentence structure) Semantics (meaning) Pragmatics or grammar (rules)
  • Slide 28
  • Structure of Language - Phonology The study of sounds of a language. No human language uses all the sounds humans can make. IPA International Phonetic Alphabet Phonemes and phones /l/ and /r/ = phonemes (English has 40) /p/ and /ph/ = phones Ghoti = fish (tough, women, position) Other sounds Tones, nasals, clicks (Genesis in the !Kung language)
  • Slide 29
  • Structure of Language - Morphology Morphemes are the smallest units of language. Words (dog, cat) = free morphemes Prefixes (un-, sub-) Syllables (-s, -ly ) Declining and conjugating Verbs are conjugated (am, are, is) Nouns are declined in some languages Latin, Greek, German, Russian, etc. Word form changes based on position in sentence. = bound morphemes
  • Slide 30
  • Structure of Language - Syntax Rules for how to put together sentences and phrases. Six possible arrangements, based on Subject, Verb, Object English is SVO = The girl will hit the boy. Forming questions: English = V 1 SV 2 O?
  • Slide 31
  • Structure of Language - Syntax Example of syntax Lewis Carrolls Jabberwocky: Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe. All mimsy were the borogoves, And the mome raths outgrabe. VerbNounAdjective
  • Slide 32
  • Structure of Language - Semantics The meaning of symbols, words, phrases, and sentences of a language. Ethnosemantics and kinship terms Aunt/uncle versus non-gendered cousin
  • Slide 33
  • Evolution of Language Old Theories: bowwow and ding-dong Locke, B.F. Skinner, Descartes New Theories: Noam Chomsky Universal and generative grammar Principles and parameters Creoles, pidgins, and EbonicsEbonics Sapir-Whorf
  • Slide 34
  • Historical Linguistics Focuses on how language changes over time and how languages relate to one another. Anthropologists are interested in cultural features that correlate with language families. Reconstruction of languages: Proto-Indo-European Sino-Tibetan Linguistic divergence Gradual or by force
  • Slide 35
  • PIE
  • Slide 36
  • Historical Linguistics Old English Compare Old, Middle, and Modern English Beowulf (Old English): Hwt! We Gardena in geardagum, eodcyninga, rym gefrunon, hu a elingas ellen fremedon. Oft Scyld Scefing sceaena reatum, monegum mgum, meodosetla ofteah, egsode eorlas. Lo, praise of the prowess of people- kings of spear-armed Danes, in days long sped, we have heard, and what honor the athelings won! Oft Scyld the Scefing tore the mead-bench from squadroned foes, from many a tribe awing the earls.
  • Slide 37
  • Historical Linguistics Middle English The Canterbury Tales (Middle English): This worthy lymytour, this noble Frere, He made alwey a maner louryng chiere Upon the Somonour, but for honestee No vileyns word as yet to hym spak he. This worthy limiter, this noble friar, He turned always a lowering face, and dire, Upon the summoner, but for courtesy No rude and insolent word as yet spoke he.
  • Slide 38
  • Descriptive Linguistics Also called structural linguistics Tries to discover the rules of phonology, morphology, and syntax of another language, especially those with no written dictionary or grammar. Seeks to discover language rules that are not written down but are discoverable in actual speech.
  • Slide 39
  • Sociolinguistics Like descriptive linguistics in a way, in that sociolinguists are concerned with the ethnography of speakingcultural and subcultural patterns of speech variation in different social contexts. Examples: Pronunciation and dialects Honorifics and social status Gender differences Multilingualism
  • Slide 40
  • Fun Stuff Language as art Calligraphy Illumination Left to Right: Chinese Greek Arabic English
  • Slide 41
  • Semiotics: Some Points of Reference
  • Slide 42
  • Science of signs Signification: systematic, structural aspects of signs; meaning-bearing potential Communication: transactional aspects of signs; cf. Jakobsons codes and messages, source and destination, channel and context Semiotics
  • Slide 43
  • Saussure: signifier-signified; arbitrary and conventional signs; (mentalistic) Peirce: Representatum (perceptible object) stands to somebody, for something Object in some respect To create an interpretant [itself a sign] Categories of Firstness, Secondness and Thirdness The Sign [N]
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Slide 47
  • Sign = Linguistic form + Meaning The word cat = [kh t] + Saussures Theory of the Sign
  • Slide 48
  • The word cat = [kh t] + SIGN = SIGNIFIER + SIGNIFIED Signification
  • Slide 49
  • Water Wasser Eau Shui Signs are Arbitrary /li:/ lit in French = bed Question marker in Russian meadow, side sheltered from the wind, or proper name Lee in English
  • Slide 50
  • [kakodudldu] [kikiRiki] German [kokoRiko] French [kukuku] Spanish Onomatopoeia [miauw] [miauw] German [meauw] Chinese [niauw] Japanese
  • Slide 51
  • English has 11 basic color terms. Russian has 12 siniy (dark blue),goluboy (light blue). Shona (a language of Zimbabwe) has 3: citema (black), cicena (white),cipswuka (red). Bassa (a language of Liberia) has 2: hui and ziza. Linguistic Relativity
  • Slide 52
  • Saussure Hjelmslev Greimas, Metz and Eco structuralism; content-expression (signified-signifier); linguistic bias; paradigms and syntagms Peirce Morris rich typologies of signs; emphasis on process of semiosis (syntactic, semantic, pragmatic dimensions); semiotic typology of discourse Eco toward a logic of culture; a theory of codes and a theory of sign production Sebeok how the body interacts with the mind to produce signs, messages, thought and ultimately cultural behaviour Semioticians
  • Slide 53
  • The syntactic, semantic and pragmatic properties of the sign A theory or discipline studying these properties Theories about how to study these properties Methods: method of formalization; method of language analysis; method of interpretation Application: use semiotics to analyze some fragment of reality, e.g. arts, architecture, film fashion, folk customs, etc. Summary: Five Notions of Semiotics [ENC]
  • Slide 54
  • Semiotics, depending on whether it is defined as a type of research or as a doctrine, as a theory or as a set of methods, can use the tools of several sciences or doctrines, from logic and metamathematics to linguistics, aesthetics, and all the social sciences. But, it must refer constantly and consistently to any of its possible objects through sign and sign functioning, using methods implying a theory of signs and sign function Summary [ENC]
  • Slide 55