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Language Basic Principles
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Communication Systems All communication systems share 3 features:
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Communication Systems 1.Mode — a means of communication, signals or signs
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Communication Systems 2. Semanticity — The signal means something to users
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Communication Systems 3. Pragmatic function — Language is a communication system that is used to produce a useful result
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Communication Systems Many communication systems share the following 4 features:
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Communication Systems 4. Interchangeable — all users can emanate or receive signals equally
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Communication Systems 5. Cultural Transmission — acquired from associating with a community
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Communication Systems 6. Arbitrariness — relation of signal to its meaning is arbitrary
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Communication Systems 7. Discreteness — utterances (messages) are made up of distinct units
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Communication Systems True language — human language — is characterized by the following two features
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Communication Systems 8. Displacement — may communicate about things not present in space or time
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Communication Systems 9. Productivity — open-ended can make an infinite number of sentences can make sentences never made before
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Human Understanding the category ‘human’ means recognizing the faculty for displacement and productivity in language It is these which distinguish human from other forms of life
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Linguistics signs Linguistic sign — A spoken form with a conventional meaning –These are the signals that make up a language
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Iconicity and arbitrariness Iconic signs— Language: Sound like the thing named by the word Graphemes: Look like the thing/meaning of the word
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Linguistics signs, iconicity, and arbitrariness Non-arbitrary signs include the following: a. Words such as barnyard sound words or words for natural noises — Such words sound like the thing they represent (iconic)
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Linguistics signs, iconicity, and arbitrariness These words are adjusted to the phonetics of the language using the word p. 17 (barnyard sound words)
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Non-arbitrary words These words are Onomatopoeic: their meaning associated with the sound (cats meow; doors creak) These are iconic
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Non-arbitrary words b. baby words and kinship words — baba, mama, dada, etc. — have a reasoned relation between the words and the neuromuscular development of infants and small children
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Non-arbitrary words Many languages have similar or identical kinship words because these words relate to the simplicity and ease of production of sounds in the developing child
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Iconicity and arbitrariness Arbitrary — A. No natural relation between sound and thing B. No reasoned relationship between sound and thing
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Linguistic signs Linguistic signs, with a small number of exceptions, are arbitrary. table, mesa, zhuozi dog, perro, gou
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Iconic written signs Written signs can be iconic 人 ‘person’ 日 ‘sun’ 月 ‘moon’ 內 ‘inside’ 肉 ‘meat’ 坐 ‘sit’
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Iconic written signs secondary iconicity (now that the association is conventional) threw vs. through their vs. there
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Comm. Systems and Animal Language 1.Mode(LF 27 – 37) 2.Semanticity 3.Pragmatic function 4.Interchangeability 5.Cultural transmission 6.Arbitrariness 7.Discreteness 8.Displacement 9.Productivity
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Linguistic signs and meaning What does it mean for a sign to mean something to us? What is meaning in human language?
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Basic principles What do you know when you know a language? [We hope that by the end of the course we can answer that question]
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Basic principles Phonetics, phonology — you can use the sound system of the language
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Basic principles Morphology — you know and can make words
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Basic principles Syntax — you know how to form utterances
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Basic principles Semantics — you understand meanings of words and items in the language
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Basic principles Styles & Pragmatics — you know how to use the language in different types of situations you know what utterances in the language are used to do
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