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Language Preview Chapter 1. Human Language Specialization OrganSurvivalSpeech Lungs Exchange CO 2 for O 2 Air flow Vocal Cords Cover tube to lungsVibration.

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Presentation on theme: "Language Preview Chapter 1. Human Language Specialization OrganSurvivalSpeech Lungs Exchange CO 2 for O 2 Air flow Vocal Cords Cover tube to lungsVibration."— Presentation transcript:

1 Language Preview Chapter 1

2 Human Language Specialization OrganSurvivalSpeech Lungs Exchange CO 2 for O 2 Air flow Vocal Cords Cover tube to lungsVibration Tongue Move food in mouthArticulation (C & V) Teeth Chew foodArticulation (C) Lips Seal oral cavityArticulation (C & V) Nose BreathingNasal resonance

3 Origin of Language: Theories Divine Gift Monogenetic theory Human Invention Echoic (imitative) Cries of nature Rhythmical grunts Love songs Evolution of Linguistic Capacity Anatomical Neurological

4 Creative System Infinity of language Grammar Pull the boat onto the beach ______ the boat Word formation New word: “Soleme” Having the properties of Soleme = “_______” Created in the process of “_____________”

5 Infiniteness Human language makes infinite use of finite means. The pink dog wanted a red balloon. ? Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.

6 Recursive Rules This is the house that Jack built. This is the cheese that sat in the house… This is the rat that ate the cheese that… This is that cat that killed the rat that… This is the dog that chased the cat…

7 Key Point Speakers of any language can understand and produce sentences they’ve never heard before. You tell me… a sentence you’ve never heard before

8 Ambiguity The man saw the fish with binoculars. You tell me… John yelled “Duck”…

9 Grammatical or not…? The fish is swimming. *Fish the swimming is. ? Swimming is the fish. *The fishing is swim. He saw two dogs. *He saw twos dog.

10 Japanese watashi-wa inu-ga mimashita I (subject) dog (object) saw (I saw a dog) *mimashita inu-ga watashi-wa (saw) dog (object) I (subject) watashi-ga inu-wa mimashita I (object) dog (subject) saw (A dog saw me)

11 Grammatical or Not? John kissed the little old lady who owned the shaggy dog. Who owned the shaggy dog John kissed the little old lady.

12 Grammatical or Not? John is difficult to love. It is difficult to love John.

13 Grammatical or Not? John is anxious to go. It is anxious to go John.

14 You Tell Me Grammatical/ungrammatical pairs

15 Linguistic Competence Internal/Innate grammar Phonetics Phonology Morphology Syntax Lexicography Semantics Pragmatics …more details coming at the end of the chapter…

16 Linguistic Competency Sound System Phonetics Phonology Words Form + meaning ≈ Arbitrary relationship Sound Symbolism  onomatopoeia

17 Competence vs. Performance Linguistic Competence Knowing Mental grammar Linguistic Performance Doing

18 Grammatical Principles Generality Parity Universality Mutability Inaccessibility

19 Grammatical or Ungrammatical? He ain’t got none. For Descriptive Linguistics: “Ungrammatical” means a native speaker would not have a reasonable expectation that the intended message will be understood

20 Dialect…

21 On final prepositions… It is a rule up with which we should not put. - Winston Churchill

22 Prove or Disprove… Language is systematic and rule-governed. Language is generative (has creative potential). Language is a set of arbitrary symbols. The symbols have conventionalized meanings The symbols are primarily vocal. Language is essentially human. Language is used for communication. Language operates in a speech community or culture. Language is acquired by all people in much the same way; language acquisition and language learning both have universal characteristics. Language changes.

23 Grammar “the system of operations for creating an indefinite number of sentences out of a finite number of elements”

24 Components of Grammar phonetic system the sounds of the language phonological system the sound patterns of the language lexical system the words or vocabulary of the language morphological system the patterns of word formation of language syntactic system the structure of sentences of the language semantic system the meanings of words and sentences of the language pragmatic system how the language is used in the context of spoken discourse

25 Two Views of Language Noam Chomsky Focus on ideal situation Homogeneous speech community Competence = performance Dell Hymes Focus on real people Speech community is critical Competence ≠ Performance

26 Noam Chomsky “Linguistic theory is concerned primarily with an ideal speaker-listener, in a completely homogeneous speech-community, who knows its language perfectly and is unaffected by such grammatically irrelevant conditions as memory limitation, distractions, shifts of attention and interest, and errors in applying his [/her] knowledge of the language in actual performance.”

27 Dell Hymes “A child from whom any and all of the grammatical sequences of a language might come with equal likelihood would be, of course, a social monster. Within the social matrix in which it acquires a system of grammar, a child acquires also a system of its use regarding persons, places, purposes, other modes of communication, etc.--all the components of the communicative events, together with attitudes and beliefs regarding them. There also develop patterns of the sequential use of language in conversation, address, standard routines, and the like. In such acquisition resides the child’s sociolinguistic competence (or more broadly, communicative competence), its ability to participate in its society as not only a speaking but also a communicating member.”

28 You tell me… If you had to choose between Chomsky & Hymes’ approaches, who would you support? Is there a value in combining &/or balancing the two approaches?

29 Teaching Grammar Prestige dialect… Second language instruction…

30 For “tomorrow” Exercises 1-6 – All (they’re easy) Read Chapter 2 Bring a small hand mirror to class


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