I What is lg
1.What does mean to „know” a lg ??
being able to produce sound which signify meanings and be understood & interpret the sounds produce by others
much of linguistic knowledge in unconscious knowledge; we know without being aware of it, which sounds and part of our lg ad which are not.
Knowledge of lg also includes knowing the environment which particular sounds can appear in.
The most important aspect of unknowing a lg: knowing that certain sounds or sound sequences signify or represent different concepts or „meanings”.
The relationship between speech sounds and the meanings which they represent (for the most part) are arbitrary.
Sound symbolism - onomatopoeic e.g. cockle-a - doodle - doo, plop, hiss
Knowledge of a lg enables sb to combine word to form phrases, and phrases to form sentences (Impossible to memorize all the possible sentences in a lg). There is finite numbers but infinite number of sentences.
Creative aspect of lg i.e. lg creativity
No enough to key words to knwe words to be able to communicate (we need rules)
II Linguistic competence and performance
1. Linguistic competence - what one knows (the knowledge about lg rules etc.). Competence is our conscious knowledge; we lear the rules without being taught.
2. Linguistic performance - how oe uses the knowledge i actual behavior. Using the lg we make mistakes e.g. slips of the togue, false startsm etc. However we ca recognise errors.
3. Spoonerism - we change the meaning of seteces by combining the soud i different way.
Examples: ”you have hissed my mistery lecture - You have missed my history lecture” ”you have tasted the whole worm- you have wasted the whole term ” ”queer old dean - dear old queen”
III What is the grammar
Grammar - what we know, our linguistic competence, internalised, ucoscious set of rules. Grammar can be understood in two ways: the grammar which speakers have i their brains and the model of description of this internalised grammar. No lg or variety of lg is superior to any other, i linguistic sense.
Descriptive grammar - describe the lg how it use
Prescriptive grammar - says which rule is correct and what is correct or ot, how to use the lg.
The grammar includes everything what speakers know about their lg:
phonetics - the articulation ad perception of speach sounds
morphology - word formatio
syntax - sentence formatio
semantics - the iterpretation of word and senteces
Linguistic main attempt - to fid out the laws of a lg and use laws that pertain to all lgs
Universal grammar - law represeting the universal properties of all lgsm eg:
sound systems of lgs - every grammar includes discrete soud segmets like p n or a
sematics universal - male, female, concrete
uiversal syntax
I The origins of lg
The divine source - lg given by God
The natural source of soud - (sound source) primitive words could have been `bow - wow' theory of lg origin onomatopoeic- echoing natural sounds.
Original souds of lg - may have come from natural cries of emotion such as pain, anger, joy eg.och! ah! Ooh! Yuck! - produced with sudden intakes of breath or exhalied breath; contain souds which are not otherwise used in speech.
Yo-he-ho theory - souds of a perso involved in physical effort could be the source of lg.
The phisacal adeptation source:
teeth - upright, not slantig outwards, roughly even i height - helpful in makig f or v
lips - flexible - helpful i makig p or b
mouth - rather small, can be opened and closed
tongue - thick and muscular, can be used to shape a variety of sounds inside the oral cavity
larynx - voice box (contains the vocal cords/ folds differs - significantly in position from other primates, upright posture moved the head more directly above the spiral column and the larynx dropped to lower position, this created a longer cavity called the pharynx, above the vocal cords, which acts as a resonator for increased range and clarity of the sounds produced via the larynx).
the human brain - unusually large to human body size
lateralized - specialize function movements involved in things like speaking & object manipulation (making or using) are largely copied to the left hemisphere.
The genetic source - babies are born with a special capacity for lgm it's aviate ad is't tide to a specific variety of lg - lateness hypothesis.
I Animal and human lg
Properties of human lg
communicative signals - intentional message send to other people
informative signals - intentionally, when we don't want to communicate anything but our behavior tells it
displacement - reference to past and future time
arbitrariness - not natural connection between a linguistic form and its meaning
productivity - (creativity, open - endedness) creating new expressions and novel utterances
Fixed reference - limiting feature of animal communication (they can convey only simple things anger, hungry etc.)
cultural transmission - lg passed from one generation to the next
duality - lg organized at two levels/ layers. Combine the same sounds to communicate different messages
Properties not unique to human lg
Vocal - auditory channel - lg signals are sent using the vocal organs and received by the ears.
Specialization - lg signals do not serve any other type of purpose such as breathing or feeding
Non- directionality - lg signals have no inherit direction and can be picked up by anyone within hearing even unseen
Rapid fade - lg signals are produced and disappear quickly
Reciprocity - ay sender of a lg signal can also be a receiver
Prevarication - lg signals can be false or used to lie or deceive
Talking to animals
Washoe
Premark
Morphology
Lexicon -mental dictionary
Morphology - system of categories & rules involved in world formation and interpretation.
Words-smallest free forms found in lg
Morpheme - smallest unit that carries info. About meaning or function.
Free morph- can B a word by itself
Bound morph- must be attached to another element
Lexical morph- nouns, verbs, adjectives (open class)
Functional morph- conjunctions, articles, prepositions, pronouns (closed class)
Derivational morph- used to create new words or change word grammatical category
Inflectional morph- indicate aspects of grammatical function of a word (NCC)
Allomorphs- diff variants of one morpheme
Root morph- carries major component of words meaning (B2LC)
Affixes- do not belong 2 lexical category, always bound
Base- form to which AFF is added
Word-based morphology- EN, because roots are usually free morphemes
Problematic cases:
-bound root -unkempt, horrify
-unrecognizable morphemes-receive, deceive, conceive
-cranberry morphemes
Common morph phenomena
-affixation
-suppletion- go went
-internal change- drive drove
-stress & tone placement
-reduplication- tatabuch llrun FULL tfabuk tfabuk vq
Phonetic - study of the characteristic of speech sound
articulatory -the study of how speech sounds are made/ articulated
acoustic phonetics - deals with the physical properties of speech as sounds as sound waves in the air
auditory / perceptual phonetics - deals with the perception, via the ear, of speech sounds
Voiced and voiceless (when the vocal cords vibrate or not)
I Linguistic word formation
DERIVATION (derywacja) - word formation (prefixes, suffixes, infixes);
INFLECTION (odmiana) - number, person, gander, aspect, tense, voice, mood
WORD- FORMATION PROCESS:
Coinage: aspirin, nylonm, vizir (new word, name for new invention, product)
Borrowing: alcochol (Arabic), boss (Dutch), croissant (France)
loan - translation (calque): skyscraper - un gratteciel (Fr. A scrape - sky), perros calientes (Sp Hot - dog), Ubermensch (superman)
compounding: bookcase, fingerprint, wallpaper, greenhouse vs. green house, redcoat (soldier) vs. red coat
blending: brunchm, smog, oxbridge, chunnel, telecast, spanglish , Franglais, breathhalyser
Brunch = breakfast + lunch
Chunnel = channek + tunnel
Telecast = television + broadcast
Spanglish = English + Spanish
clipping when we shorter some word- but categories are not changed
fax - facsimile, fan - fanatic, lab - laboratory, flu - fluenza, gym - gymnasium, hi-fi - high fidelity
new words based on the name of a person or a place:
jeans (Genoa), Sandwich (Earl of Sandwitch), Fahrenheit (Gabriel Farenhait)
backformation the category of a word in changed:
television- televise; emotion - emote; globe-trotter - globe-trot; sculptor - sculpt
hypocorisms reduction of longer word + y/ie:
movie, telly, Aussie (Australian), barbie, bookie (bookmaker), brekky (breakfast), hankie, chrissy pressies (christmas presents)
conversion (zero derivation)
paper - to paper (v)
must - a must (n)
want to be - wannabe (n)
dirty - to dirty (v)
a guess - to guess (v)
print out - a printout (n)
SUBSTANCIAL CHANGE IN MEANING
A doctor - to doctor (informant = neuter, poison, falsify
Run around - give sb the runaround (to refuse to help someone, sending them to someone or some-where else to get help)
II Properties & compounds
A-N COMPOUNDS
Most of them characterized by a more prominent stress on their first component
(stress is longer) `greenhouse / green `house
In non- compounds the 2nd element is generally stressed
Examples:
Blackboard - chalkboard
Black board - a board which is black
Wetsuit - a driver's costume
Wet suit - suit which is w
Tense and plural manners can typically not be attached to the 1st element
Example:
The player dropped kick the ball through the goalposts (ill - formed, formed incorrectly)
The player drop kicked…
Plural marking on the 1st element is usually disallowed
Example:
* The foxes hunter didn't have a licence
The fox huters didn't have a license
* The roads map are expencive
The road maps are expencive
Exceptions: passers-by; parks supervisor; mothers-in-law
TYPES OF COMPOUNDS
endocentric the rightmost component identifies the genera class which the meaning of the entire word belongs
Example:
Dog food - type of food
Cave man - type of man
exocentric the meaning of the compound doea not follow from meanings of its part
Example:
Greenbotley - a fly
Redneck - ultra conservative, white working - class person
Sugardaddy - a woman's old, reach lover
III Pluralization in English compounds
In endocentric compounds
oak leaves (leaf)
wisdom teeth (tooth)
club feet (foot)
policemen (policeman)
In exocentric compounds
maple leafs
sabre tooths
bigfoots
walmans
IV Incorporation
The combination a word (usu. A noun) with a verb to form a compound verb
Example:
Ponapean
without incorporation:
I pahn pereki lohs
I will unroll mat
= I'll unroll the mats
with incorporation:
I paun perek - 1 os
I will unroll-mat
= I'll engage in mat unrolli
V Multiple process
Deli - delicatessen (clipping, borrowing)
Lase - lasser (acronym, backformation)
Waspish - WASP (acronym, derivation)
I PHONOLOGY - descripotion of the systems and pattern of speach suouds in a lg.
phoneme
- meanining - distinguishing sound in a lg
- the single sound type, which come to be represented by a single written form.
- an abstract segment
/t/ used to indicate a phoneme
[t] for each phonetic or phisically produced segment
- esential property of phoneme is that it functions contrastively, e.g.
/f/ or [v] as in fat - vat; fine - vine
Phoneme- the abstract unit or sound type (in the mind) /t/
Phones - different versions of the phoneme, regulary produced in actual speech (in the mounth) [t]
Allophones - a group of several phones, all of which are versions of one phoneme [t ] [t ] [D]
Minimal pars - 2 words identical in form exept for a contrast in one phoneme, occuring in the same position: bet - bed, site - side, shake - sake
Minimal sets- a group of words that can be different by changing one phoneme (always in the same position): big - pig - rig - fig - dig - wig
phonotactics - constrains of the sequence or position of english phonemes.
- possible sequence - e.g. lig, vig (accidetal gaps)
- impossible sequence- e.g. [ / ] (systematic gaps)
open syllables (have an onset and nucles, but no coda, e.g. me, to, no)
closed syllables (when a coda is present, e.g. up, cup, at, hat)
The onset and the coda can consist more than one consonant know that as a consonant cluster
II CO-ARTICULATION EFFECTS - the process of making one sound almost at the same time as the nesxt sound.
assimilation
- same aspect of one segment is taken
- or `copied' by another segment in sequence, e.g. /I/ and /æ/ are realised in pin, pan, can /kæn/, but in can go becomes /n/
dissimilation - the opposite of assimilation
Results in two sounds becoming less alike in articulatory or acoustic term, e.g. `fifths' [fɪfθs] becomes [fɪfts]
elision (deletion)
The process of not pronouncing a sound that might be present in the pronounciation of a word in insolation,
You and me; Guns'n'Roses, Friendship, He must have been, He must be
Epenthesis - process that inserts a syllabic or non syllabic segment. Withi an existing string of segments.
Warmth and something In casual speech [p] is inserted
Metathesis -process that reorders a sequence of segment. It often results in a sequence of phones thet is easier to articulate.
Spaghetti -> pesghetti; prescribe -prescription -> perescribe - perescription
vowel reduction
been /i:/ -> /i/ - in rapid speech
Liason /linking
R-starring/star in staring/stare at
J-seeing/see in weighing/weigh all
W-suing/sue Arthur showing/show it
-If 1st vowel is NOT high, a linking r is used
-If 1st vowel is high, a glide is inserted between the two vowels - [j], [w]
Intrusive r - Appears in contexts where no plausible source of historical or underlying /r/ exists. Emma Atkins, spa annex, vanilla and banana ice-cream, Mr Yamashita and me.
Pragmatics- study of intended meaning
Invisible meaning- recognition of what is meant even when it isn't said, based on assumptions and expectations
Linguistic context (co-text)- set of other words used in same phrase or sentence
Physical context- connected wit time and place where we encounter linguistic expressions
Deixis- words possible to interpret only when physical context is known. Here, There, This, That
Deictic expressions- Time, Place, Person
Reference- act of using lg to enable lsnr to identify sth
Inference- any additional info used by lsnr to connect what was said to what must be meant.
Anaphora- a referring expression, subsequent reference to already introduced entity
Antecedent- first mention
Presupposition- what spkr assumes is true or known by lsnr
Constancy under negation- presupposition true for negative meaning
Speech act- action performed by spkr with utterance, requesting, commanding, questioning, informing
Direct speech act- 2 provide info
Indirect speech act- form used to perform other function that structure implies
Face- your public self-image
Politeness- showing awareness to sb's face
Face threatening act- threat to sb's self image, ordering. Do it right now!
Face saving act- saying sth that lessens threat, indirect speech. Could you do it now?
Negative face act- need to be independent and have freedom from imposition. I'm sorry to bother you
Positive face- need to be connected, belong to, be member of group. Let's do I together…
Implicature- inferences about what is said but not actually meant. Are you coming to the party tonight? I've got exam tomorrow.
Coop principle- participants in conversation are cooperating with each other.
Conceptual meaning- literal meaning of the word
Associative meaning- associations or connotations attached 2 word
Semantic Features- procedures 4 analyzing meaning
Agent- entity that performs action
Theme(patient)- entity involved/affected with action
Instrument- entity that agent use 2 perform action
Experiencer- entity who/which have feeling, perception, state
Location- where entity is
Source- where entity moves from
Goal- where entity moves to
Lexical relations
Synonyms- words with similar/same meaning
Antonyms- words with opposite meaning
Gradable- negative does not mean opposite (not big doesn't mean it is… small)
Non gradable- negative means the opposite (if sth is not alive, it means is dead)
Reversives- tie/untie, pack/unpack, raise/lower, enter/exit
Hyponymy- meaning of one form included in meaning of another (dog=animal, daisy=flower)
Co-hyponyms- couple exemplars of one category (dog, horse=animal)
Superordinate- category which have some exemplars (insect=ant, cockroach)
Prototype- clearest example of category
Homophony- two or more written forms with the same pronunciation (bare-bear, meat-meet)
Homonymy- one form, two or more unrelated meanings (bank, bat, race)
Polysemy- one form with multiple meanings which are related by extension (head, run, face)
Metonymy- connection btw words which are close in everyday meaning (bottle+coke, king+crown)
Collocation paraphrase- two sentences that can have the same meaning
Denotation- dictionary definition
Connotation- associations connected to the word, emotional suggestions (snake=evil, danger)
Intension- internal concept of a term or concept, that constitutes its formal definition (ship=water vehicle)
Extension- range of applicability by naming the particular objects (cargo ships, battleships)
Syntatic categories
Determiner (Det) - the, a this, these
Degree word (Deg) - too, so, very, more
Qualifier (Qual) - always, often, never
Auxiliary (Aux) - will, can, must
Conjunction (Con) - and, or, but
Noun (N) - boy, Harry, moisture
Verb (V) - arrive, discuss, hear
Adjective (A) - good, tall, old
Preposition (P) - to, in, on,
Adverb (Adv) - silently, slowly, quietly
P - phrase
NP, VP, AP, PP - phrase level
N, V, A, P - word level
N, V, A, P are heads
Specifiers (Det), (Qual), (Deg) - attached to the top level of phrase structure, to the left of the head
[NP the books about the war]
[VP never eat a hamburger]
[AP quite certain about Mary]
[PP almost in the house]
Complements - attached to the right of the head
Constituent - syntactic unit
Adjunction- Category B is adjoined to category A
Adjuncts are always the sisters of bar-level categories in the phrase.
(manner, place, time etc.)
Complement: daughter of X', sister of X |
Adjunct: daughter of X', sister of X` |
the parents of the twins |
the parents from Detroit |
EXAMPLES:
[NP an analysis of the sentence with tree diagrams]
[AP so fond of coffee after dinner]
[NP a silly analysis of the sentence]
[AdvP clearly faster than me]
The sister of an adjunct should be replaceable with one, while the sister of a complement should not be.
Q: Did you meet the parents of Janey and Billy? Q: Did you meet the parents from Chicago?
A: ??No, but I met the ones of the twins. A: No, but I met the ones from Detroit.
Complements and adjuncts can both follow the head. Do so-replacement can omit an adjunct, but not a complement.
I ate on Monday, but did not do so on Tuesday.
I ate cheese, but did not do so pie.
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