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School Kids Investigating Language & Life in Society 3 February 2015 Lesson 4: Levels of Linguistic Structure, History of English Teaching Fellows Anna Bax and Katie Jan
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Levels of Linguistic Structure Phonology Morphology Lexicon Syntax Intonation / Prosody
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Phonology Phonology = all the patterns in a language that directly involve sounds. Rules for “sound systems” of languages. Phoneme = a single sound of a language. Phonemes are contrastive if they can change the meaning of the words they belong to. Kill vs. kiss vs. kick Cat vs. rat vs. bat
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Morphology Morphology = rules for how “chunks” of meaning get combined into words Morpheme = a meaningful unit of language than cannot be further divided into smaller parts. Prefix, suffix, root. Free morphemes can stand on their own. Bound morphemes have to be attached to other morphemes.
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Syntax Syntax = the rules for combining words into sentences. Also known as “grammar.” These rules are so natural we don’t even need to learn them - babies learn to speak their native language perfectly without ever taking an English class.
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Lexicon Lexicon = differences in vocabulary
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Intonation / Prosody Intonation = the patterns of stress and rhythm; the rise and fall of a voice Friends clip Say the following sentence, each time stressing a different word: I didn’t say we should kill him. How you say something affects its meaning!
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History of English Sociolinguistics: the study of language in relation to social patterns Register: a variety of language used for a particular purpose or in a particular social setting Language change does not happen randomly – it follows patterns!
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