LIN 1310B Introduction to Linguistics Prof: Nikolay Slavkov TA: Quinghua Tang Acknowledgements: Many of the slides for this course are based on Eta Schneiderman’s slides.
Today Introduction Go over syllabus and course outline What is linguistics? Major subfields of linguistics. Announcement: please start reading Chapter One of the text.
Course Website www.courseweb.uottawa.ca/LIN1310BH2007/Index.htm www.courseweb.uottawa.ca/LIN1310BH2007/Index.htm
Major Sub-fields of Linguistics Phonetics: study of speech sounds Articularory phonetics (how sounds are produced/articulated) Acoustic phonetics (the physical properties of sounds) Auditory phonetics (how sounds are perceived) Phonology: study of sound systems How the particular sounds of a language interact with each other and form an integrated system and how such systems differ from one language to another -Phonetics and phonology are very similar Simply put: -Phonetics deals more with sounds -Phonology with sound systems, interaction between sounds and rules that apply between sounds -Articulatory phonetics is dominant, most studied. Picture of vocal aparatus IPA Usefulness: description of speech sounds of languages. Languages around the world use different speech sounds. E.g.
Phonetics Vocal Tract
Source: Department of Linguistics, University of Pennsylvania
Phonetics IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet) Examples from Peter Ladefoged’s website http://phonetics.ucla.edu/course/chapter1/chapter1.html
Phonology How sounds pattern together and interact with each other to form a particular sound system. What processes apply in the particular sound system.
Example: Hungarian Vowel Harmony Hungarian dative suffix alternates between the two forms -nak and -nek depending on the vowels in the word to which it attaches ablak ‘window’ + nak = ablanak ‘window-dat’ kert ‘garden’ + nek = kertnek ‘garden-dat’
Example: Hungarian Vowel Harmony cim ‘address’ + nak or nek??? => i is a front vowel and so is e => therefore cim takes the -nek suffix: cimnek ‘address-dat’ bíró ‘judge’ + nak or nek??? => ó is a back vowel and so is a => therefore bíró takes the –nak suffix: bírónak ‘judge-dat’
Major Sub-fields of Linguistics Morphology: study of structure of words How words are made up of smaller meaningful units (morphemes), how new words are coined, how words combine into compounds, etc. Example: please prefix suffix prefix+suffix displease pleasant unpleasant pleasure displeasure pleasing -Phonetics and phonology are very similar Simply put: -Phonetics deals more with sounds -Phonology with sound systems, interaction between sounds and rules/processes that apply to them -Articulatory phonetics is dominant, most studied. Picture of vocal aparatus IPA Usefulness: description of speech sounds of languages. Languages around the world use different speech sounds. E.g.
Major Sub-fields of Linguistics Syntax: structure of sentences The way in which sentences are constructed and how sentences are related to each other Examples of grammatical and ungrammatical (*) sentences: Blue kites fly angrily at the bottom of the sea in the sky. Blue piranhas swim angrily at the bottom of the sea. *Kites blue of fly angrily the bottom at sea. *John like apple that I gives him.
Major Sub-fields of Linguistics Semantics: study of meaning How words and sentences are related to the (real or imaginary) objects they refer to and the situations they describe Pragmatics: How the meaning conveyed by a word or sentence depends on aspects of the context in which it is used (such as time, place, social relationship between speaker and hearer, and speaker’s assumptions about the hearer’s beliefs)
Major Sub-fields of Linguistics Psycholinguistics: The study of the interrelationship of language and cognitive structures The acquisition of language Neurolinguistics: The study of the brain and how it functions in the production, perception and acquisition of language
Major Sub-fields of Linguistics: Applied Linguistics: The application of the methods and results of linguistics to such areas as language teaching; national language policies; lexicography; translation; and language in politics, advertising, classrooms, courts, and the like; language pathology (speech therapy and audiology) Anthropological Linguistics: The study of the interrelationship between language and culture (particularly in the context of non-Western cultures and societies)
Major Sub-fields of Linguistics Historical Linguistics: The study of how languages change through time The relationships of languages to each other Sociolinguistics: The study of the interrelationships of language and social structure, linguistic variation, and attitudes toward language
Reminder: Please start reading Chapter One of the text!
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Many of the slides for this course are based on Eta Schneiderman’s slides.