General features of Language
General features of Language :
The application of insights from theoretical linguistics to practical matters such as language teaching, remedial linguistic therapy, language planning or whatever.
Arbitrariness
Areas of Linguistics
Any of a number of areas of study in which linguistic insights have been brought to bear, for instance sociolinguistics in which scholars study society and the way language is used in it. Other examples are psycholinguistics which is concerned with the psychological and linguistic development of the child.
Competence
According to Chomsky in his Aspects of the theory of syntax this is the abstract ability of an individual to speak the language which he/she has learned as native language in his/her childhood. The competence of a speaker is unaffected by such factors as nervousness, temporary loss of memory, speech errors. These latter phenomena are entirely within the domain of performance which refers to the process of applying one's competence in the act of speaking. Bear in mind that competence also refers to the ability to judge if a sentence is grammatically well formed; it is an unconscious ability.
Context
A term referring to the environment in which an element sound, word, phrase occurs. The context may determine what elements may be present, in which case one says that there are 'co occurrence restrictions' for instance 1. /r/ may not occur after /s/ in a syllable in English, e.g. */sri:n/ is not phonotactically permissible in English; 2. the progressive form cannot occur with stative verbs, e.g. We are knowing German is not well—formed in English.
Contrast
A difference between two linguistic items which can be exploited systematically. The distinction between the two forms arises from the fact that these can occupy one and the same slot in a syntagm, i.e. they alternate paradigmatically, e.g. the different inflectional forms of verbs contrast in both English and German. Forms which contrast are called distinctive. This can apply to sounds as well, for instance /p/ and /b/ contrast in English as minimal pairs such as pin /pɪn/ : bin /bɪn/ show.
Convention
An agreement, usually reached unconsciously by speakers in a community, that relationships are to apply between linguistic items, between these and the outside world or to apply in the use of rules in the grammar of their language.
Creativity
An accepted feature of human language — deriving from the phenomenon of sentence generation — which accounts for speakers' ability to produce and to understand a theoretically infinite number of sentences.
Descriptive
An approach to linguistics which is concerned with saying what language is like and not what it should be like.
Diachronic
Refers to language viewed over time and contrasts with synchronic which refers to a point in time. This is one of the major structural distinctions introduced by Saussure and which is used to characterise types of linguistic investigation.
Displacement
One of the key characteristics of human language which enables it to refer to situations which are not here and now, e.g. I studied linguistics in London when I was in my twenties.
Duality of Patterning
A structural principle of human language whereby larger units consist of smaller building blocks, the number of such blocks being limited but the combinations being almost infinite. For instance all words consist of combinations of a limited number of sounds, say about 40 in either English or German. Equally all sentences consist of structures from a small set with different words occupying different points in the structures allowing for virtually unlimited variety.
Economy
A principle of linguistic analysis which demands that rules and units are to be kept to a minimum, i.e. every postulated rule or unit must be justified linguistically by capturing a generalisation about the language being analysed, if not about all languages.
Extra Linguistic
Any phenomenon which lies outside of language. An extralinguistic reason for a linguistic feature would be one which is not to be found in the language itself.
Level
A reference to a set of recognisible divisions in the structure of natural language. These divisions are largely independent of each other and are characterised by rules and regularities of organisation. Traditionally five levels are recognised: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics. Pragmatics may also be considered as a separate level from semantics. Furthermore levels may have subdivisions as is the case with morphology which falls into inflectional and derivational morphology. The term 'level' may also be taken to refer to divisions within syntax in generative grammar.
Figurative
Any use of a word in a non literal sense, e.g. at the foot of the mountain where foot is employed figuratively to indicate the bottom of the mountain. Figurative usage is the source of the second meaning of polysemous words.
Formalist
An adjective referring to linguistic analyses which lay emphasis on relatively abstract conceptions of language structure.
General Linguistics
A broad term for investigations which are concerned with the nature of language, procedures of linguistic analysis, etc. without considering to what use these can be put. It contrasts explicitly with applied linguistics.
Generative
A reference to a type of linguistic analysis which relies heavily on the formulation of rules for the exhaustive description of the sentences of a language.
Head
The centre of a phrase or sentence which is possibly qualified by further optional elements, in the phrase these bright new signs the head is signs as all other elements refer to it and are optional. The term is also used in lexicology to refer to the determining section of a compound; in family tree, the element tree is head and family is modifier. This has consequences for grammar, especially in synthetic languages, such as German where in a compound like Stammbuch the gender is neuter because the head Buch is although the modifying word is masculine.
Hierarchy
Any order of elements from the most central or basic to the most peripheral, e.g. a hierarchy of word classes in English would include nouns and verbs at the top and elements like adjectives and adverbs further down with conjunctions and subordinators still further down. The notions of top and bottom are intended in a metaphorical sense.
Idealisation
A situation where the linguist chooses to ignore details of language use for reasons of greater generalisation.
Language
A system which consists of a set of symbols — realised phonetically by sounds — which are used in a regular order to convey a certain meaning. Apart from these formal characteristics, definitions of languages tend to highlight other aspects such as the fact that language is used regularly by humans and that it has a powerful social function.
Lay Speaker
A general term to refer to an individual who does not possess linguistic training and who can be taken to be largely unaware of the structure of language.
Level
A reference to a set of recognisible divisions in the structure of natural language. These divisions are largely independent of each other and are characterised by rules and regularities of organisation. Traditionally five levels are recognised: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics. Pragmatics may also be considered as a separate level from semantics. Furthermore levels may have subdivisions as is the case with morphology which falls into inflectional and derivational morphology. The term 'level' may also be taken to refer to divisions within syntax in generative grammar.
Linguistics
The study of language. As a scientific discipline built on objective principles, linguistics did not develop until the beginning of the 19th century. The approach then was historical as linguists were mainly concerned with the reconstruction of the Indo European language. With the advent of structuralism at the beginning of the 20th century, it became oriented towards viewing language at one point in time. The middle of this century saw a radically new approach — known as generative grammar — which stressed our unconscious knowledge of language and underlying structures to be found in all languages.
Linguistic
determinism Refers to the view, propounded by Edward Sapir and Benjamin Lee Whorf, that language determines the way in which people think. Also termed the linguistic relativity hypothesis.
Marked
A term used to state that a particular form is statistically unusual or unexpected in a certain context. For instance zero plurals in English such as sheep or deer are marked.
Meta Language
The language which is used to discuss language; see also object language.
Metaphor
An application of a word to another with which it is figuratively but not literally associated, e.g. food for thought. This process is very common in the use of language and may lead to changes in grammar as with the verb go in English where its spatial meaning has come to be used metaphorically for temporal contexts as in He's going to learn Russian.
Onomastics
The linguistic study of names, both personal and place names. This field is particularly concerned with etymology and with the general historical value of the information which names offer the linguist.
Parameter
Any aspect of language which can obtain a specific value in a given language, e.g. canonical word order which can have the verb in a declarative sentence either before the subject, after the subject or after both subject and object. Contrast principle in this respect.
Performance
The actual production of language as opposed to the knowledge about the structure of one's native language which a speaker has internalised during childhood.
Productivity
A reference to the extent that a given process is not bound in its application to a certain input. For instance the prefixation of re— to verbs in modern English is productive because this can be done with practically all verbs, e.g. rethink, re—do, re—write. The term also refers — in syntax — to the ability of speakers to produce an unlimited number of sentences using a limited set of structures.
Psychological Reality
The extent to which the constructs of linguistic theory can be taken to have a basis in the human mind, i.e. to somehow be reflected in human cognitive structures. Many linguists are divided on this issue, one extreme claiming that this requirement of a theory is not necessary, other saying that it is the ultimate test of any respectable theory.
Reflexiveness
The possibility of using language to talk about language; this is one of its delimiting characteristics with respect to other communication systems.
Rhetoric
The technique of speaking effectively in public. Regarded in the past as an art and cultivated deliberately.
Root
1. In grammar the unalterable core of a word to which all suffixes are added, e.g. friend in un—friend—li—ness. 2. In etymology, the earliest form of a word. 3. In phonetics, the part of the tongue which lies furthest back in the mouth.
Sapir—Whorf hypothesis
The notion that thought is determined by language. While few linguists nowadays accept this strict link, there would seem to be some truth to the postulation of the two American anthropologists/linguists.
Sign Language
A communication system in which people use their hands to convey signals. In recent years sign language has been the object of linguists' attention and has come to be regarded as a fully fledged system comparable to natural language with those individuals who are congenitally deaf and who learn sign language from childhood.
Structuralism
A type of linguistic analysis which stresses the interrelatedness of all levels and sub levels of language. It was introduced at the beginning of the century by Ferdinand de Saussure 1957 to 1913 as a deliberate reaction to the historically oriented linguistics of the 19th century and subsequently established itself as the standard paradigm until the 1950's when it was joined, if not replaced, by generative grammar.
Synchronic
A reference to one point of time in a language. This may be the present but need not be. Forms a dichotomy with diachronic. Structural studies of language are usually synchronic and the Indo Europeanists of the 19th century were diachronic in their approach.
Taxonomic
A reference to linguistics in which the main aim is to list and classify features and phenomena. It is usually implied that no attempt for linguistic generalisations is made.
Theoretical Linguistics
The study of the structure of language without any concern for practical applications which might arise from one's work.
Underlying Representation
A representation of what is assumed by the linguist to be the structure which lies behind or forms the initial stage in the generation of a surface structure item. For instance one could say that /di:b/ is the underlying representation for German 'thief' and that the surface form [di:p] arises through the application of an automatic rule of final devoicing.
Unproductive
Refers to a process which is bound to specific lexemes and hence cannot be used at will by speakers, e.g. umlaut is an unproductive process in German because it cannot be applied in plural formation with new words. Unproductive processes can nonetheless be statistically common, again umlaut is unproductive but occurs with words which have a high frequency in German because they belong to the core of the language — mainly names of beings, parts of the body, etc.
Zero
Any element which is postulated by the linguist but which has no realisation in language, e.g. the plural morpheme which some linguists might assume to be present, but not realised, in a word like die Wagen.
Zoosemiotics
The investigation of communications systems used by animals.
Arbitrariness
An essential notion in structural linguistics which denies any necessary relationship between linguistic signs and their referents, example objects in the outside world.
Areas of Linguistics
Any of a number of areas of study in which linguistic insights have been brought to bear, for instance sociolinguistics in which scholars study society and the way language is used in it. Other examples are psycholinguistics which is concerned with the psychological and linguistic development of the child.
Competence
According to Chomsky in his Aspects of the theory of syntax this is the abstract ability of an individual to speak the language which he/she has learned as native language in his/her childhood. The competence of a speaker is unaffected by such factors as nervousness, temporary loss of memory, speech errors. These latter phenomena are entirely within the domain of performance which refers to the process of applying one's competence in the act of speaking. Bear in mind that competence also refers to the ability to judge if a sentence is grammatically well formed; it is an unconscious ability.
Context
A term referring to the environment in which an element sound, word, phrase occurs. The context may determine what elements may be present, in which case one says that there are 'co occurrence restrictions' for instance 1. /r/ may not occur after /s/ in a syllable in English, e.g. */sri:n/ is not phonotactically permissible in English; 2. the progressive form cannot occur with stative verbs, e.g. We are knowing German is not well—formed in English.
Contrast
A difference between two linguistic items which can be exploited systematically. The distinction between the two forms arises from the fact that these can occupy one and the same slot in a syntagm, i.e. they alternate paradigmatically, e.g. the different inflectional forms of verbs contrast in both English and German. Forms which contrast are called distinctive. This can apply to sounds as well, for instance /p/ and /b/ contrast in English as minimal pairs such as pin /pɪn/ : bin /bɪn/ show.
Convention
An agreement, usually reached unconsciously by speakers in a community, that relationships are to apply between linguistic items, between these and the outside world or to apply in the use of rules in the grammar of their language.
Creativity
An accepted feature of human language — deriving from the phenomenon of sentence generation — which accounts for speakers' ability to produce and to understand a theoretically infinite number of sentences.
Descriptive
An approach to linguistics which is concerned with saying what language is like and not what it should be like.
Diachronic
Refers to language viewed over time and contrasts with synchronic which refers to a point in time. This is one of the major structural distinctions introduced by Saussure and which is used to characterise types of linguistic investigation.
Displacement
One of the key characteristics of human language which enables it to refer to situations which are not here and now, e.g. I studied linguistics in London when I was in my twenties.
Duality of Patterning
A structural principle of human language whereby larger units consist of smaller building blocks, the number of such blocks being limited but the combinations being almost infinite. For instance all words consist of combinations of a limited number of sounds, say about 40 in either English or German. Equally all sentences consist of structures from a small set with different words occupying different points in the structures allowing for virtually unlimited variety.
Economy
A principle of linguistic analysis which demands that rules and units are to be kept to a minimum, i.e. every postulated rule or unit must be justified linguistically by capturing a generalisation about the language being analysed, if not about all languages.
Extra Linguistic
Any phenomenon which lies outside of language. An extralinguistic reason for a linguistic feature would be one which is not to be found in the language itself.
Level
A reference to a set of recognisible divisions in the structure of natural language. These divisions are largely independent of each other and are characterised by rules and regularities of organisation. Traditionally five levels are recognised: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics. Pragmatics may also be considered as a separate level from semantics. Furthermore levels may have subdivisions as is the case with morphology which falls into inflectional and derivational morphology. The term 'level' may also be taken to refer to divisions within syntax in generative grammar.
Figurative
Any use of a word in a non literal sense, e.g. at the foot of the mountain where foot is employed figuratively to indicate the bottom of the mountain. Figurative usage is the source of the second meaning of polysemous words.
Formalist
An adjective referring to linguistic analyses which lay emphasis on relatively abstract conceptions of language structure.
General Linguistics
A broad term for investigations which are concerned with the nature of language, procedures of linguistic analysis, etc. without considering to what use these can be put. It contrasts explicitly with applied linguistics.
Generative
A reference to a type of linguistic analysis which relies heavily on the formulation of rules for the exhaustive description of the sentences of a language.
Head
The centre of a phrase or sentence which is possibly qualified by further optional elements, in the phrase these bright new signs the head is signs as all other elements refer to it and are optional. The term is also used in lexicology to refer to the determining section of a compound; in family tree, the element tree is head and family is modifier. This has consequences for grammar, especially in synthetic languages, such as German where in a compound like Stammbuch the gender is neuter because the head Buch is although the modifying word is masculine.
Hierarchy
Any order of elements from the most central or basic to the most peripheral, e.g. a hierarchy of word classes in English would include nouns and verbs at the top and elements like adjectives and adverbs further down with conjunctions and subordinators still further down. The notions of top and bottom are intended in a metaphorical sense.
Idealisation
A situation where the linguist chooses to ignore details of language use for reasons of greater generalisation.
Language
A system which consists of a set of symbols — realised phonetically by sounds — which are used in a regular order to convey a certain meaning. Apart from these formal characteristics, definitions of languages tend to highlight other aspects such as the fact that language is used regularly by humans and that it has a powerful social function.
Lay Speaker
A general term to refer to an individual who does not possess linguistic training and who can be taken to be largely unaware of the structure of language.
Level
A reference to a set of recognisible divisions in the structure of natural language. These divisions are largely independent of each other and are characterised by rules and regularities of organisation. Traditionally five levels are recognised: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics. Pragmatics may also be considered as a separate level from semantics. Furthermore levels may have subdivisions as is the case with morphology which falls into inflectional and derivational morphology. The term 'level' may also be taken to refer to divisions within syntax in generative grammar.
Linguistics
The study of language. As a scientific discipline built on objective principles, linguistics did not develop until the beginning of the 19th century. The approach then was historical as linguists were mainly concerned with the reconstruction of the Indo European language. With the advent of structuralism at the beginning of the 20th century, it became oriented towards viewing language at one point in time. The middle of this century saw a radically new approach — known as generative grammar — which stressed our unconscious knowledge of language and underlying structures to be found in all languages.
Linguistic
determinism Refers to the view, propounded by Edward Sapir and Benjamin Lee Whorf, that language determines the way in which people think. Also termed the linguistic relativity hypothesis.
Marked
A term used to state that a particular form is statistically unusual or unexpected in a certain context. For instance zero plurals in English such as sheep or deer are marked.
Meta Language
The language which is used to discuss language; see also object language.
Metaphor
An application of a word to another with which it is figuratively but not literally associated, e.g. food for thought. This process is very common in the use of language and may lead to changes in grammar as with the verb go in English where its spatial meaning has come to be used metaphorically for temporal contexts as in He's going to learn Russian.
Onomastics
The linguistic study of names, both personal and place names. This field is particularly concerned with etymology and with the general historical value of the information which names offer the linguist.
Parameter
Any aspect of language which can obtain a specific value in a given language, e.g. canonical word order which can have the verb in a declarative sentence either before the subject, after the subject or after both subject and object. Contrast principle in this respect.
Performance
The actual production of language as opposed to the knowledge about the structure of one's native language which a speaker has internalised during childhood.
Productivity
A reference to the extent that a given process is not bound in its application to a certain input. For instance the prefixation of re— to verbs in modern English is productive because this can be done with practically all verbs, e.g. rethink, re—do, re—write. The term also refers — in syntax — to the ability of speakers to produce an unlimited number of sentences using a limited set of structures.
Psychological Reality
The extent to which the constructs of linguistic theory can be taken to have a basis in the human mind, i.e. to somehow be reflected in human cognitive structures. Many linguists are divided on this issue, one extreme claiming that this requirement of a theory is not necessary, other saying that it is the ultimate test of any respectable theory.
Reflexiveness
The possibility of using language to talk about language; this is one of its delimiting characteristics with respect to other communication systems.
Rhetoric
The technique of speaking effectively in public. Regarded in the past as an art and cultivated deliberately.
Root
1. In grammar the unalterable core of a word to which all suffixes are added, e.g. friend in un—friend—li—ness. 2. In etymology, the earliest form of a word. 3. In phonetics, the part of the tongue which lies furthest back in the mouth.
Sapir—Whorf hypothesis
The notion that thought is determined by language. While few linguists nowadays accept this strict link, there would seem to be some truth to the postulation of the two American anthropologists/linguists.
Sign Language
A communication system in which people use their hands to convey signals. In recent years sign language has been the object of linguists' attention and has come to be regarded as a fully fledged system comparable to natural language with those individuals who are congenitally deaf and who learn sign language from childhood.
Structuralism
A type of linguistic analysis which stresses the interrelatedness of all levels and sub levels of language. It was introduced at the beginning of the century by Ferdinand de Saussure 1957 to 1913 as a deliberate reaction to the historically oriented linguistics of the 19th century and subsequently established itself as the standard paradigm until the 1950's when it was joined, if not replaced, by generative grammar.
Synchronic
A reference to one point of time in a language. This may be the present but need not be. Forms a dichotomy with diachronic. Structural studies of language are usually synchronic and the Indo Europeanists of the 19th century were diachronic in their approach.
Taxonomic
A reference to linguistics in which the main aim is to list and classify features and phenomena. It is usually implied that no attempt for linguistic generalisations is made.
Theoretical Linguistics
The study of the structure of language without any concern for practical applications which might arise from one's work.
Underlying Representation
A representation of what is assumed by the linguist to be the structure which lies behind or forms the initial stage in the generation of a surface structure item. For instance one could say that /di:b/ is the underlying representation for German 'thief' and that the surface form [di:p] arises through the application of an automatic rule of final devoicing.
Unproductive
Refers to a process which is bound to specific lexemes and hence cannot be used at will by speakers, e.g. umlaut is an unproductive process in German because it cannot be applied in plural formation with new words. Unproductive processes can nonetheless be statistically common, again umlaut is unproductive but occurs with words which have a high frequency in German because they belong to the core of the language — mainly names of beings, parts of the body, etc.
Zero
Any element which is postulated by the linguist but which has no realisation in language, e.g. the plural morpheme which some linguists might assume to be present, but not realised, in a word like die Wagen.
Zoosemiotics
The investigation of communications systems used by animals.
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