英语语言学_chapter_1_introduction(1)

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1、The Nature of Language,Introduction1.1What is linguistics 1.1.1Definition Linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.,The Scope of Linguistics,Language is a complicated entity with multiple layers and facets , so the linguists have to concentrate on one aspect of it at a ti

2、me. The study of sounds which are used in linguistic communication is called phonetics .,The study of how sounds are put together and used in communication is called phonology.,While sounds are primary in linguistic communication, they are represented by certain symbols, i.e. , words and morphemes.

3、The study of the way in which morphemes are arranged to form words is called morphology.,The combination of these words to form permissible sentences in languages is governed by rules. The study of how morphemes and words are combined to form sentences is called syntax.,The ultimate objective of lan

4、guage is not just to create grammatically well-formed sentences, but to convey meaning. The study of meaning in language is called semantics.,Language communication does not occur in a vacuum. It always occurs in a context, i.e., it always occurs at a certain time, at a certain place, between partic

5、ipants with particular intentions. The study of meaning in context of use is called pragmatics .,Language is a social activity carried out in a certain social environment by human beings. Therefore, language and society are closely related.,The language a person uses often reveals his social backgro

6、und, and there exist social norms that determine the type of language to be used on a certain occasion ;,Language changes are often caused by social changes. The study of language with reference to society is called sociolinguistics.,The study of language with reference to the workings of mind is ca

7、lled psycholinguistics.,Findings in linguistic studies can often be applied to the solution of such problems as the recovery of speech ability. The study of such applications is generally known as applied linguistics.,But in a narrow sense, applied linguistics refers to the application of linguistic

8、 principles and theories to language teaching and learning, especially the teaching of foreign and second languages.,According to Sapir (1921:8):”Language is a purely human and non-instinctive method of communicating ideas, emotions and desires by means of voluntarily produced symbols.”,1) However b

9、roadly we construe the terms “ idea”, “emotion” and “desire”, it seems clear that there is much that is communicated by language which is not covered by any of them; and “ idea” in particular is inherently imprecise.,This definition suffers many defects.,2) there are many systems of voluntarily prod

10、uced symbols that we only count as languages in what we feel to be an extended or metaphorical sense of the word “language”.,what is now popularly referred to by means of the expression “body language” -which makes use of gestures, postures, eye-gaze, etc.-would seem to satisfy this point of Sapirs

11、definition.,For example,In their Outline of Linguistic Analysis Bloch and Trager wrote (1942:5): “A language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols by means of which a social group co-operates.”,What is striking about this definition, in contrast with Sapirs is that it makes no appeal, except indire

12、ctly and by implication, to the communicative function of language,Instead, it puts all the emphasis upon its social function; and, in doing so, as we shall see later, it takes a rather narrow view of the role that language plays in society.,The Block and Trager definition differs from Sapirs in tha

13、t it brings in the property of “arbitrariness” and explicitly restricts language to spoken language (thus making the phrase “ written language” contradictory).,“ the institution whereby humans communicate and interact with each other by means of habitually used oral-auditory arbitrary symbols.”,In h

14、is Essay on Language, Hall (1968:158) tells us that language is,are, first of all, the fact that both communication and interaction are introduced into the definition (“interaction” being broader than and, in this respect, better than “ cooperation”),Among the points to notice here,second, that the

15、term “ oral-auditory” can be taken to be roughly equivalent to “ vocal” differing from it only in that “ oral-auditory” makes reference to the hearer as well as to the speaker i.e. to the receiver as well as the sender of the vocal signals that we identify as language- utterances).,by a particular s

16、ociety is part of that societys culture.,Hall, like Sapir, treats language as a purely human institution; and the term “ institution” makes explicit the view that the language that is used,Chomsky says that “From now on I will consider a language to be a set (finite or infinite) of sentences, each finite in length and constructed out of a finite set of elements.”,Syntactic Structures (1957:13),Design Features of Human Language,1) Arbitrariness: there are no direct or intrinsic links between form and meaning or between the signal and the message.,

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