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Language Study An Introduction
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What is language? Human A system of signs Vocal Conventional Communicative Changes over time
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Assumptions about Language We ought not to make value judgments that one language is better than another. All living languages change. Language roots can be extrapolated. Languages spread for political, economic, or military reasons, not because they are easier to speak or understand, or because of their intrinsic beauty.
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Terminology: Structure Phonology--study of the sound system of a language Etymology--study of word origins Morphology--study of the smallest units of meaning in a language (individual words or suffixes, prefixes, etc) Syntax--study of the structure and organizing of words into sentences
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More terminology: structure Semantics--study of meaning and how it changes over time Pragmatics--study of the conventions of conversation or communication Inflection--a modification inside a word which changes its meaning (ex: run-ran; child-children; Jane-Jane’s)
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Types of language Synthetic--information packed into individual words; highly inflected language [ex-Old English, Latin] Analytic--information contained in word order, not individual words [ex-Present Day English] Agglutinative--information contained in smaller-than word units [rare]
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Organizing info into sentences Synthetic [OE] nominative ___ -as subject accusative ___ -as direct object dative -e -um indirect object object of prep genitive -es -a possession Analytic [PDE] subject before verb direct object after action verb indirect object between verb and direct o object of preposition after preposition possession AND plural with “s” or “z” sound
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