简明语言学教程9
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1.1 Linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.It is a scientific study because it (a) is based on the systematic investigation of linguistic data. It (b) discovers the nature and rules of the underlying language system. It (c) collects language facts that display some similarities, and generalizations are made about them.The study of language as a whole if often called general linguistics.phonetics(语音学): the study of soundsphonology(音位学): how sounds are put together and used to convey meaningmorphology(形态学): how morphemes(词素) are arranged and combined to form wordssyntax(句法学): the study of rules that govern the combination of words to form grammaticallypermissible sentencessemantics(语义学): the study of meaningpragmatics(语用学): the study of meaning in the context of language useinterdisciplinary branches: sociolinguistics(社会语言学), psycholinguistics(心理语言学), applied linguistics(应用语言学)Important distinctions in linguisticsprescriptive(规定性old linguistics) vs. descriptive(描述性modern linguistics)synchronic(共时性) vs. diachronic(历时性): most linguistic studies are of synchronic descriptions,which is prior in modern linguisticsspeech and writing: speech is prior to writing in modern linguisticslangue(语言系统abstract linguistic system) and parole(话语/言语realization of langue in actualuse): Swiss linguist F. de Saussure----forefather of modern linguisticscompetence(语言能力ideal user’s knowledge of rules of his language) and performance(语言运用actual realization of this knowledge): American linguist N. Chomskytraditional grammar and modern linguistics: Saussure’s book “Course in General Linguistics”marked the beginning of modern linguistics1.2 Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.LAD: Language Acquisition Device -----ChomskyArbitrariness (任意性): Different sounds are used to refer to the same object in different languages.Productivity/creativity (能产性): Construction and interpretation of new signals are possible, so that large number of sentences can be produced.Duality (双层性): Two levels enable people to talk about anything within their knowledge. lower level(sounds)---higher level(words)Displacement(移位性): enable people to talk about a wide range of things, free from barriers caused by separation in time or place.Cultural transmission(文化传承): We are born with the ability to acquire language, the details of language system have to be taught and learned.2.1 Speech and writing are the two media for communication, of which speech ismore basic/primary.The sounds which are produced by humans through their speech organs and meaningful in communication constitute the phonic medium of language. The individual sounds within this range are the speech sounds.2.2 Phonetics is the study of the phonic medium of language, which concerned with all the sounds thatoccur in the world’s languages.articulatory phonetics, auditory phonetics, acoustic phoneticsSpeech organs:pharyngeal; cavity---throat; oral cavity---mouth; nasal cavity---noseIPA: 国际音标diacritics: 变音符broad transcription: 宽式标音(used in dictionaries and teaching textbooks)narrow transcription: 严式标音(used by phoneticians in their study)vowels(the air stream meets with no obstruction) and consonants(obstructed)stops(塞音), fricatives(擦音), affricates(塞擦音), liquids(流音), nasals, glides, bilabial(双唇音), laviodental(唇齿音), dental(齿音), alveolar(齿龈音), palatal(腭音), velar(软腭音), glottal(喉音)close vowels, semi-close vowels, semi-open vowels, open vowels(openness)unrounded vowels, rounded vowels(shape of the lips)long/tense vowels----short/lax vowelsmonophthongs(单元音), diphthongs(双元音) (single or combined)2.3 Phonology and phonetics differ in their approach and focus.phonology: how speech sounds form patterns and are used to convey meaningconcerned with sound system of a particular languagephonetics: of a general nature, interested in all the speech soundsA phone(音素) is a phonetic unit or segment.(speech sounds are all phones)a phone does not necessarily distinguish meaningA phoneme(音位) is a phonological unit.(an abstract unit of distinctive value)not particular sound, but is realized by a certain phone in a certain phonetic context The different phones which can represent a phoneme in different phonetic environments are called the allophones(音位变体) of that phoneme.Rules in phonology:Sequential rules(序列规则)---rules that govern the combination of sounds in a particular language.Assimilation rule(同化规则)---assimilates one sound to another by “copying”a feature of a sequential phoneme, thus making the two phones similar. for ease of articulation(清晰发音)e.g. green, screamDeletion rule(省略规则)---e.g. desi g nationSuprasegmental features(超切分特征): the phonemic features that occur above the level of the segments.stress(重音)---word stress and sentence stressThe location of stress in English distinguishes meaning.E.g. ‘import (n.) im’port (v.) // blackbird vs. black birdtone(语调)---pitch variation(音高变体) distinguish meaning E.g. 汉语四声Intonation(音调)---English tones: falling tone, rising tone, fall-rise tone, rise-fall toneE.g. That’s not the book he wants.3.1 Morphology: study of the internal structure of words, and rules by which words are formed3.2 open class words(开放类): new words can be added—nouns, verbs, adjective and adverbsclosed class words(封闭类): “grammatical” or “functional” words3.3 Word is the smallest free form found in language.Morphemes are the minimal units of meaning.Free and bound morphemes(自由词素can be a word by itself粘着词素must be attached to another one---affix)3.4 V----teachN Af----er3.5 Derivational and inflectional morphemes(派生词素和屈折词素)Free morphemes Bound morphemesRoot Root Affixdog, cat -ceive Prefix Suffixgrammar -vert Derivational Derivational Inflectional …-mit un-, dis- -ment -s, -ing, -‘s, -er3.6 Morphological rules determine how morphemes combine to form words. E.g. un-accept-able3.8 Another way to form words is compounding. E.g. bittersweetWord Formations: compounding, blending, backformation, shortening4.1 Syntax studies the rules that govern the formation of sentences.4.2 Category is a group of linguistic items which fulfill the same or similar functions in a particular languagesuch as a sentence, a noun phrase or a verb.Syntactic categories—word-level categories:major lexical categories (often assumed as the heads around which phrases are built)---Noun (N) Verb (V) Adjective (A) Preposition (P)minor lexical categories---Determiner (Det) Degree words (Deg) Qualifier (Qual) Auxiliary (Aux) Conjunction (Con)Three criteria(条件) determining a word’s category: meaning, inflection (变形) and distribution (分布)A word’s category can be determined only by all three criteria.Phrase category is determined by the word category around which the phrase is built.noun phrase (NP), verb phrase (VP), adjective phrase (AP), prepositional phrase (PP)phrases that are formed of more than one word usually contain : head, specifier, complement4.3 Phrase structure rule---special type of grammatical mechanism regulating the arrangement of elementsthat make up a phraseNP→(Det) N (PP) an NP consists of a determiner, an N head, and a PP complementVP→(Qual) V (NP) a VP consists of a qualifier, a V head, and an NP complementAP→(Deg) A (PP) ……PP→(Deg) P (NP) ……XP rule: XP→(specifier) X (complement)Coordination rule: coordinate structures (consist a conjunction “and”/”or”)X→X *Con XEither an X or an XP can be coordinated; one or more categories can occur to the left of the Con.4.4 Phrase elements: specifiers, complements, modifiersspecifiers determiner qualifier degree wordheads N V A / Pcomplementizers (Cs)—words introducing the sentence complementcomplement clause—sentence introduced by the complementizer complement phrase(CP)matrix clause—construction in which the CP embeded嵌入As, Ns, Ps can all take CP. Adjectives: (heads) afraid, certain, awareNouns: (heads) fact, claim, belief Prepositions: (heads)over, aboutmodifiers: all lexical categories can have modifiers.AP(+Ns): precedes the head e.g. a very careful girl PP(+Vs): follows the head e.g. open with care AdvP(+Vs): precedes or follows the head e.g. read carefully/carefully readThe Expanded XP rule: XP→(Spec) (Mod) X (Complement*) (Mod)4.5 The S rule: S→NP VP ------ Inflp (=S)→NP Infl VP ------Infl can be taken by an abstract category encodedin a verb indicating tense or an auxiliary(助动词)4.6 Transformation a special rule that can move an element from one position to anotherauxiliary movement(助动词移位) inversion: move Infl to the left of the subject NP.within larger CPs (embedded or not): inversion: move Infl to C. P53 Figure 4-8 do insertion(插入): insert interrogative do into an empty Infl position, than move Infl to C.deep and surface structure: e.g. Will the train arrive?Deep: S Surface:NP VPDet Infl Vthe train will arriveThe XP rule→D structure→transformations→S structurewh movement: move the wh phrase to the beginning of the sentence/the specifier position under CPP57 Figure 4-16 P58 Figure 4-18move αand constraints on transformationsmove α: general rule for all the movement rules α: any element that can be movedlimits: inversion can move an auxiliary from the Infl to the nearest C positionno element may be removed from a coordinate structure5.1 Semantics is the study of meaning (from a linguistic point of view.)5.2 The naming theory: The words used in a language are simply labels of the objects they stand for.The limitations of this theory are obvious. There’s verbs, adjectives, etc. and also abstract nouns.The conceptualist view: Words and things are related through the mediation of concepts in the mind.Contextualism: The meaning of a word is its use in the language.Behaviorism: The meaning of a language form is the situation in which the speaker utters it and the response it calls forth in the hearer.5.3 Sense and reference are two terms often encountered in the study of word meaning, which are relatedbut different aspects of meaning.Sense: e.g. “dog”---a domesticated mammal... refer to any animal that meets the features described Reference: “dog”---A said to B:” The dog’s barking.”refer to a certain dog known to both A&BMajor sense relations:synonymy---words that are close in meaningdialectal syn.(autumn in BE & fall in AE), stylistic syn.(daddy & father),syn. that differ in emotive or evaluative meaning(same meaning, different emotions)collocational syn.(different usage), semantically different syn.(differ slightly in meaning) polysemy(one word may have more than one meaning)homonymy (homophones--- two words same in sound, homographs---same in spelling, complete homonyms---same in both sound and spelling)hyponymy(relation between a general word—superordinate, and a specific word--hyponyms)antonymy(words that are opposite in meaning)gradable ant.---e.g. hot vs. cold complementary ant.---e.g. male vs. femalerelational ant.---e.g. husband vs. wife5.4 Sense relations between sentences:X is synonymous with Y. E.g. He was a bachelor all his life. / He never married….X, True—Y, True; X, False---Y FalseX is inconsistent with Y. E.g. John’s married. / John’s a bachelor. X, T—Y, F; X, F—Y, TX entails Y. E.g. He’s been to France. / He’s been to Europe. X, T—Y, T; X, F—Y, may be T or FX presupposes Y. E.g. John’s bike needs repairing. / John has a bike. X, T—Y, T; X, F—Y, TX is a contradiction. E.g. My unmarried sister married a bachelor. X is always false.X is semantically anomalous. (absurd in the sense)5.5 componential analysis----lexical meaning E.g. man---+HUMAN, +ADULT, +ANIMATE, +MALEpredication(谓项) analysis---sentence meaning E.g. The kids like apples. ---KID, APPLE (LIKE) Tom smokes. ---TOM (SMOKE) It is hot. --- (BE HOT)6.1 Pragmatics studies how speakers of a language use sentences to effect successful communication(meaning in a certain context).Sentence meaning vs. utterance meaningUtterance is the realization of the abstract meaning of a sentence in a real situation of communication or context, it is context-dependent.6.2 Speech act theory: aim to answer “What do we do when using language?”----John Austin in late 1950slocutionary act(言内行为—字面意思), illocutionary act(言外行为—目的), perlocutionary act(言后行为—结果) John Searle: classification of illocutionary acts---five general types of things we do with languageSpecific acts that fall into each type share the same illocutionary point1. representatives/assertive: stating or describing, saying what the speaker believes to be trueE.g. The earth is a globe.2. directives: trying to get the hearer to do something E.g. Close the door. / Will you close the door?3. commissives: committing the speaker himself to some future course of actionE.g. I promise to come. / I will bring you the book tomorrow without fail.4. expressive: expressing feelings or attitude towards an existing stateE.g. It’s kind of you to ... / I’m sorry for the mess I’ve made.5. declarations: bringing about immediate changes by saying somethingE.g. I now declare the meeting open. / I appoint you chairman of the committee.Indirect speech act--primary speech act (goal of communication) + secondary speech act (means by which he achieves the goal) ----Searle6.3 Conventional implicature(暗示) & nonconventional implicature-----GriceCon. imp. E.g. He is rich but he is not greedy. imp. Rich people are usually greedy.The participants must first of all be willing to cooperate to converse with each other. The general principle is called the Cooperative Principle. (CP)Four maxims(准则) under CP: The maxim of quantity (informative but no more than required), quality (don’t say what you believe to be false or what you lack adequate evidence), relation (be relevant), manner (avoid obscurity or ambiguity & be brief and orderly)These maxims can be violated. (when misleading, lying, etc.)Chap. 7 Language change (diachronic 历时的) Historical linguisticsphonological changes: vowels---the most dramatic changemorphological and syntactic change:morphological: Addition of affixes (Fusion 融合word word---base +suffix /prefix +base)Loss of affixes---some are via sound changessyntactic: change of word order Old English: subject-object-verbchange in negation rule Old English: I love thee not.lexical and semantic change:lexical: Addition of new words---takes place obviously and quicklyCoinage (coin for new things and objects), Clipped words (缩略构词),Blending (combine parts of other words, e.g. brunch),Acronyms (首字构词e.g. WTO),Back-formation (subtract affixes from old words, e.g. donate---from “donation”)Functional shift /Conversion (shift without adding affixes, e.g. to knee/cool; a reject)Borrowing (borrow from other languages, e.g. bonus from Latin, cycle from Greek…)Loss of words---takes place gradually over several generationsSome words are short-lived because of the discontinuation of the object they name.semantic: three processes of semantic change---semantic broadening: e.g. holiday = holy day in the past, but any rest day todaysemantic narrowing: e.g. girl = young person of either sex in the pastsemantic shift: e.g. nice = ignorant a thousand years agorecent trends: moving towards greater informality, influence of American English,influence of science and technology (space travel, computer and internet lang. etc.) causes of language change: development of science &tech., social & political changes and needs,the way children acquire language, grammar simplification, elaboration &complication, etc. No single causeChap. 8 Language and societySociolinguistics is the sub-field of linguistics that studies the relation between language and society, between the uses of language and the social structures in which the users of languagelive. (社会语言学) Halliday & HudsonLanguage is used to communicate meaning, and to establish and maintain social relationships.Social background determines the kind of language one uses, and language reflects one’s info.speech community---the social group that is singled out for any special studyVarious social groups exist within a speech community. A social group may distinguish itself fromthe rest of the community by the educational background, the occupation, the gender, the age ,of the ethnic affiliation of its members.speech variety(变体)---any distinguishable form of speech used by a speaker or a group of speakersthree types of speech variety of special interest: regional dialects, sociolects, registersTwo approaches to sociolinguistic studies: macro-sociolinguistics & micro-sociolinguisticsThe varieties of language are related to the users and the use to which the language is put.Dialectal varieties: regional dialect (linguistic variety used by people living in the same geographical region---geographical barrier), sociolect (characteristic of a particular socialclass---different social conditions), language and gender (female speech is less assertive andthus sounds more polite), language and age (old people are more conservative and like usingold words more), idiolect (personal dialect), ethnic dialect (social dialect of a languagecutting across regional differences e.g. Black English)Register: the type of language which is selected as appropriate to the type of situation linguistic repertoire---the totality of linguistic varieties possessed by an individualthree social variables that determine the register(the features appropriate to the situation): field of discourse (语场purpose and subject-matter of communication non-technical or technical, determines the vocabulary used and the phono. & gramm. features), tenor of discourse (语旨who the participants are and the relationship between them determines the formality and the level of technicality),mode of discourse(语式the means of communication)E.g. a lecture on biology in a technical collegeField: scientific (biological) Tenor: teacher—student (formal, polite) Mode: oral (lecturing) Degree of formality: intimate—casual—consultative—formal—frozenStandard dialects (employed by government, used by mass media, taught in edu. institutions, based on a selected variety of lang., usually local speech of political or commercial centers,for official purposes or any formal occasions)Pidgin (a variety that mixes or blends languages) and Creole (a pidgin becoming the primary lang.of a speech community of which the children acquire the pidgin as native lang.)Chap. 9 Language and culture are interdependent on each other and have evolved together.Culture is integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, & behavior. (material & spiritual cult.) Relationship between lang. &cult. : Language symbolizes cultural reality, plays a major role in perpetuating of a culture, is related to what the culture is and affects a culture’s way ofthinking. Language is to culture what part is to whole.discourse communities--- members of the social group use similar lang. to meet their needsdiscourse accents---unique uses of each group’s language, the ways and the style of their talking Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis (SWH): Language filters people’s perception and the way they categorize their experiences.Language reflects cultural preoccupations and constrains the way people think.Context is important in complementing the meanings encoded in the language.Any linguistic sign has a denotative (指示意义—内含), connotative (暗涵意义—外延), or iconic(图像意义) kind of meaning. All these types of meanings are bound with cultural encodings orassociations.some cultural differences in language use: greeting and terms of address, gratitude and compliments, color words, privacy and taboos(禁忌), rounding off numbers, words andcultural specific connotations, cultural-related idioms, proverbs and metaphors Culture contact--- acculturation(文化移入political conquests and expansions), assimilation (吸收immigration), amalgamation (合并ethnical mix / synthesis rather than the elimination orabsorption)Cultural overlap (文化重叠owe to similarities in natural environ. and human psychology)Cultural diffusion (文化扩展e.g. loan words gradually and unceasingly)cultural imperialism (文化帝国主义)---owe to linguistic imperialismspecial language policy protecting the purity of their languages---linguistic nationalism Chap. 10 Language acquisition---child’s acquisition of his mother tongueThree theories: the behaviorist (行为主义语言习得观), the innatist(语法天生…),the interactionist (互动主义…)Behaviorist: language is a kind of behavior, language learning is simply a matter of imitation and habit formation. Children imitate words selectively and according to their ownunderstanding of the sounds or patterns, which is based on what the children have alreadyknown instead of what is “available” in the environment. This theory fails to explain howthey acquire more complex grammatical structures of the languageInnatist: LAD was described as an imaginary “black box” existing somewhere in the human brain.It is said to contain principles that are universal to all human languages.Universal Grammar: innate knowledge of basic grammatical systemChildren ‘s acquisition of grammatical rules is guided by principles of an innate UG.Interactionist: language is a result of the complex interplay between the human characteristics of the child and the environment in which he grows.child directed speech (CDS)(slow rate, high pitch音高, rich intonation抑扬, shorter andsimpler sentence structure)The cognitive development relates to language acquisition mainly in two ways:First, as children’s conceptual development leads to their language development, theirlanguage development also helps in the formation and enhancement of the concept.Second, the cognitive factors determine how the child makes sense of the linguistic systemhimself instead of what meanings the child perceives (理解) and expresses.Two factors remarkably relevant to children’s language developmentLanguage environment is essential in providing input for language acquisition:Behaviorist: language environment plays a major roleInnatist: environment is a stimulus that triggers the pre-equipped LADInteractionist: call for the quality of the language samples available in the ling. environmentAge they start to learn the language:Critical Period Hypothesis (CPH): LAD works successfully only when it’s stimulated at the righttime—a specific and limited time period for language acquisition (Eric Lenneberg)Two versions of CPH: strong one—children must acquire their first language by pubertyweak one—language learning will be more difficult and incomplete after puberty ----consensus: there’s a critical period for first language acquisitionStages in child language development:Phonological development—children must pass one stage before proceeding to the nextVocabulary development—under-extension, over-extensionVocabulary development goes together with the child’s knowledge of the environment.Children may under-extend or overextend it when learning a new word.under-extension: e.g. child gets confused hearing the color of white used for paper when he first thought it as the word for snowover-extension: a child takes a property of an object and generalizes it. likely to occur later Grammatical developmentPragmatic developmentAtypical development (非典型发展)hearing impairment (听力损伤), mental retardation (智力缺陷), autism (孤独症), stuttering(口吃), aphasia (失语症), dyslexia (诵读困难), dysgraphia (书写困难)Chap. 11 Second language acquisition (SLA) is the systematic study of how one person acquires a second language subsequent to his native language (NL/L1).Whether the target language (TL) to be learnt is called a second language (SL/L2) or a foreignlanguage (FL) depends on its status as a second language or foreign language in the country.Contrastive Analysis (CA)--1960s :positive/negative transfer: the former facilitate target language learning, the latter interfereCA compares the forms and meanings across two languages to locate the mismatches or differences so as to predict the possible learning difficulty.It was soon found problematic: uninformative, inaccurateError Analysis (EA): independently describe the learners’ interlanguage (their version of the target language and the target language itself), and compare the two forms to locate mismatches.It gives less consideration to learner s’ native language than CA. reach heyday in 1970sTwo main sorts of errors: interlingual errors (语际错误result from cross-linguistic interferenceat different levels—phonological, lexical…), intralingual errors (语内错误result from faultyor partial learning of the TL, independent of the NL e.g. learning strategies-based error)Overgeneralization—the use of previously available strategies in new situationsCross-association—interference of two words similar in meaning, spelling and pronunciationEA was criticized for its neglect of learners’ role as active participants in learning. (mid-1970s)Interlanguage: Three important characteristics—systematicity (系统性), permeability (渗透性), fossilization (石化a process occurring from time to time in which incorrect linguistic features become apermanent part of the way a person speaks or writes a language. fossilized pronunciation leads to accent) Input Hypothesis---Krashen: two independent means or routes of second language learning: acquisition: subconscious process learning: conscious effortsLearners advance their language learning gradually by receiving “comprehensible input”. ”i+1”It received criticism later, for he mistook “input” as “intake”.Individual differences: language aptitude (天资), age of acquisition, personalitymotivation----instrumental motivation (for external goal), integrative motivation (for the wish toidentify with the target culture), resultative motivation (for external purposes), intrinsicmotivation (for pleasure),learning strategies (motivation plays an important role in use of learning strategies)----cognitive strategies (认知策略involved in analyzing, synthesizing(合成) and internalizing(内在化) what has been learned), metacognitive strategies (元认知策略the techniques inplanning, monitoring and evaluating one’s learning), affect/social strategies (deal with theways learners interact or communicate with other speakers, native or non-native)Chap. 12 Language and the brainneurolinguistics (神经语言学): study of language disorders and the relationship between the brain and language. lateralization (侧化)—cognitive functions controlled by either side of the brainThe brain is divided into two sections:the lower section—brain stem(脑干shared by all animals to keep the body alive by maintaining the essential functions)the higher section—cerebrum(大脑differs in different species, not essential for life)cerebellum—at the rear of the brain , beneath the cerebrum, behind the brainstemneuron神经元Neurons form the cortex(脑皮层the surface of the brain)The cortex has many wrinkles: a ridge (hills) called sulcus, a deep and prominent sulcus called fissure The cortex is the decision-making organ of the body and “storehouse” of “memory”, it makes human distinctive in the animal world—animals have no cortex.The cortex is separated by the longitudinal fissure into the left and right cerebral hemispheres, the。
Chapter one Introduction一、定义1. Linguistics 语言学Linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.2. General Linguistics 普通语言学The study of language as a whole is often called General linguistics.3. Language 语言Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication. 语言是人类用来交际的任意性的有声符号体系。
4. Design Features 识别特征It refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication.语言识别特征是指人类语言区别与其他任何动物的交际体系的限定性特征。
⑴Arbitrariness任意性There is no logical connection between meanings and sounds.P.S the arbitrary nature of language is a sign of sophistication and it makes it possible for language to have an unlimited source of expressions⑵Productivity多产性Animals are quite limited in the messages they are able to send.⑶Duality双重性Language is a system, which consists of two sets of structures, or two levels.⑷Displacement移位性Language can be used to refer to contexts removed from the immediate situations of the speaker.⑸Cultural transmission文化传递Human capacity for language has a genetic basis, but we have to be taught and learned the details of any language system. This showed that language is culturally transmitted. Not by instinct. Animals are born with the capacity to produce the set of calls peculiar to their species.5. Competence 语言能力Competence is the ideal user’s knowledge of the rules of his language.6. Performance 语言运用Performance is the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication. 语言运用是所掌握的规则在语言交际中的体现。
页眉内容《语言学概论》学习指导第一章III. Answer the following questions briefly.1.What features does human language have, which can not be foundin animal communication system?2.Why is spoken language given priority to written language inmodern linguistics?3.What are the features of modern linguistics?第二章语音学一、导读2.1 语音研究人类交际包括两种形式:语言交际(linguistic communication) 和非语言交际(paralinguistic communication)。
非语言交际包括手势、表情、眼神或图表等。
语言交际包括口语(spoken language)和书面语(written language)。
在多数情况下,人们主要是通过口语进行交际。
口语交际的媒介是语音(speech sounds),也就是说人们通过声道(vocal track)发出的音来表达意义。
这种对语音的研究被叫做语音学(phonetics)。
口语交际是一个复杂的过程。
可以想象,当人们交际时,语音首先被说话者发出,然后,它在空气中被传递并被听话者接收。
也就是说,口语交际包括三个基本步骤:语音的发出→语音在空气中的传导→语音的接收。
根据这三个步骤, 语音研究也自然地分成三个主要研究领域。
对第一个步骤的研究是发声语音学(articulatory phonetics),研究语音的产生。
对第二个步骤的研究是声学语音学(acoustic phonetics),研究语音的物理特征。
对第三个步骤的研究是听觉语音学(auditory phonetics),研究和语音感知有关的内容。
《新编简明英语语言学教程》自学指导书一、课程编码及适用专业课程编码:04101212适用专业:英语专业函授本科二、课程性质《新编简明英语语言学教程》是英语专业函授本科必修的一门基础课程,是高等学校英语专业(四年制)高年级阶段所开设的一门课。
英语语言学是一门理论性很强的课程,涉及多个学科,知识广泛,是英语专业本科阶段由基础步入提高阶段的一门综合性理论课程。
三、本课程的地位和作用本课程与英语专业其他课程相辅相成。
作为一门理论性较强的课程,英语语言学的学习和理解有赖于英语专业其他课程为学生打下良好的英语基础。
同时,本课程介绍的语言各层次的基本理论和成果将会提高学生对语言的社会、人文、经济、科技以及个人修养等方面重要性的认识,使学生了解语言研究的丰富成果,这对于学生学好英语专业其他课程,也大有裨益。
四、学习目的和要求本课程的学习目的和要求在于全方位地提高学生的语言学理论水平和理论指导实践的能力,引导学生探索英语交际能力的提高途径、英汉两种语言的差异,拓宽学生的思路和视野,培养语言意识,发展理性思维,以期帮助学生理解和掌握英汉语习得规律,用以指导语言学习和教学实践。
为了学好这门课,学习时应注意以下几点:(一)理解和掌握语言学各个分支的基本定义和概念。
(二)在掌握定义的基础上,反复练习和实践语言的产生、发展和结构。
(三)将语言学和现实生活结合起来,把语言和社会结合起来,把语言和文化结合起来。
(四)将英语语言学和汉语语言学进行比较学习。
五、本课程的学习方法为了学好本课程,首先要树立正确的学习目的和态度,在学习中要刻苦钻研、踏踏实实、掌握语言及语言学各层次的各种概念和术语,全面系统地了解语言现象,意识到语言研究的重要性,并能描述语言现象。
通过认真听老师讲课,对语言学理论有一个整体的把握,熟悉语言学各层面研究的经典理论并能把握语言学理论的最新发展。
在学习中注意语言学理论的各个不同层次与不同阶段的不同要求,把握不同阶段的侧重点,理清语言学发展的脉路。
简明语言学教程8Chapter 9 Language and Culture 1. What is culture? Culture2. relationship between language and culture Discourse community3. Sapir-Whorf hypothesis Linguistic relativityStrong version---weak version4. Linguistic evidence of cultural differences P123-1285.Cultural teaching and learning Accultuation6. cultural overlap and diffusion7. Intercultual communicationChapter 10 Language Acquisition 1. definitionLanguage acquisition—the child’s development of his mother tongue 2. three theories of language acquisition 1) Behaviorist viewStimulus-Response-Reinforcement 2) Innatist view ALD3) Interactionist view Motherese/caretaker talk 3. Cognitive factors Two ways4. language environment and the critical period hypothesis Critical period Two versions5. Stages in child language development T/F1. In general, language acquisition refers to children’s development of their native language of the community in which they have been brought up.2. A certain amount of concious instruction on the part of parents may have no effect on the language of a child.3. Some languages are more challenging to acquire as a native language.4. A particular aspect of a language may appear to be more difficult to acquire than an1equivalent part of another language.5. Many utterance types produced by children do not closely resemble structures found in adult speech.6. There is a three-word sentence stage in the first language acquisition.7. Utterances at the multiword stage are often referred to as telegraphic speech. 8. Imitation and overt teachig play a major role in the child’s matery of language.9. Speakers of different languages are capable of distinguishing and recognizing experiences of the same objective world according to their respective different linguistc coding system.10. If a child is deprived of linguistic environment, he or she is unlikely to learn a language successfully later on.11. Human capacity for language has a genetic basis, i.e. we are all born with the ability to acquire language and the details of a langauge system are genetically transmitted.12. In first language acquisition children’s grammar models exactly after the grammar of adult language.13. Instruction and correction are key factors in child language development.14. A child born to a Chinese or English speaking family takes about the same number of years to acquire their native tongue, regardless of their general intelligence.15. An innatist view of language acquisition holds that human beings are biologically programmed for language.16. A child who enters a foreign language speech community by the age of three or four can learn the new language without the trace of an accent.17. When a child acquires his mother tongue, he also acquires a langue-specific culture and becomes socialized in certain ways.language acquisition?A. Language acquisition is a process of habit formation.B. Language acquisition is the species-specific property of human beings.C. Children are born with an innate ability to acquire language.D. Humans are equipped with the neural prerequisites for language and language use.2. Which stage does the child belong to according to the stage of first language acquisition when we heard his saying like “Baby chair”,”Mummy sock” etc. A. babbling stage B. one-word stage C. two-word stage D. multi-word stage3. Language acquisition is primarily the acquisition of the ____ system of language. A. phonological B. semantic C. grammatical D. communicative4. In general, the __________ stage begins roughly in the second half of thechild’s second year.A) babbling B) one-word2C)two-word D) multiword5. Basically all the following categories except ______ are always missing in the children’s telegraphic speech stage.A the copula verb “be” B. inflectional morphemes C. function words D. content words6. In first language acquisition children usually ______grammatical rules from the linguistic information they hear.A) use B) accept C) generalize D) reconstructlanguage acquisition?_______. nguage acquisition is a process of habit formationnguage acquisition is the species-specific property of human beingsC.Children are born with an innate ability to acquire languageD.Humans are equipped with the neural prerequisites for language and language use 8. At the age of four, children_____.A. can master the essentials of their mother tongueB. can only babble several soundsC..can name the things around them onlyD. can write out all the grammatical rules of their mother tongue.9. A child who knows the general plural form may apply the rule to irregular nouns and produce “foots”. This is called ______.A. assimilationB. transferC. overgeneralizationD. underextension10. It is estimated that the number of basic words known byEnglish-speaking school children of age six is around ______.A. 7800B. 6800C. 5800D. 480011.Linguistic determination and linguistic relativity are also known as ____. A)linguistic universals B) functionalismB)Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis D) structuralism12.Some Southern learners of English in China tend to say “night” as “light”.This shows: .( ) A.They cannot pronounce/n/B.Interlangue interference because there is notthe sound /n/in their mother tongueC.The teachers do not have a good teaching methodD.They do not like to pronounce nasal sounds13. ______ holds that human beings are biologically programmed for language and that the language develops in the child just as otherbiological function such as walking. A. The behaviorist view B. The innatist view C. The interactionist view D. The cognitive theory14. Which of the following hypothesis is put forward by Bric Lenneberg?A. Critical Period HypothesisB. Input HypothesisC. Language Acquisition Device HypothesisD. Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis31.The study of human languages as a whole is g_______ linguistics, while the study of a particular language is called p_________ linguistics.2. A linguistic study is descriptive if it describes and analyses facts observed; it is p______ if it tries to lay down rules for \3. The reason why an English speaker and a Chinese speaker are not mutually intelligible is because language is culturally t____________.4. “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet”. This sentence means that language has the feature of a_________.5. In F. de Saussure's dichotomy, langue refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community; p______is its realization in actual use.6. If a linguistic study describes and analyzes the language people actually use, it is said to be d______ .7. Language exists in time and changes through time. The descriptionof a language at some point of time is called a s______ study of language.8. Any language is composed of three main elements: speech sounds, grammatical structure, and m____ .9. Articulatory phonetics describes how s__________ sounds are made and provides aframe work.10. If a particular language has forty-eight meaningful sounds, it is said tohave forty-eight p__________ .11. Comsonant sounds can be either voiced or voiceless. For example, the sound\v______ and the sound \12. If the back of the tongue is at the highest point near the soft palate, we have a b______ vowel. 13. Articulatory phonetics studies the movement of the vocal organs in producing the sounds of speech; while a__________ phonetics studies the way the sounds of the speech are perceived by the human ear.14. An initial classification will divide the speech sounds into two broad categories: v________ and c__________.15. The allophone of the same phoneme are said to be in c___________ distribution.16. The basic unit in phonetics is p_______, while the basic unit in phonology is p_______.17. A phoneme is an abstract unit and it is realized by a certain ________ in a certain phonetic context.18. Comsonant sounds can be either voiced or voiceless. For example, the sound\v______ and the sound \19.Clear [1] and dark[]are allophones of the same one phoneme /1/.They never take the same position in sound combinations, thus they are said to be in c________ distribution.20. An essential difference between consonants and vowels is whether the air coming from the lungs meets any o______ when a sound is produced.21. Phonological rules that govern the combination of sounds in a particular language are called s______ rules.22. When pitch, stress and sound length are tired to the sentence rather than the word in isolation, they are collectively known as i______. 23. I______ morphemes are attached to words, but they never change their syntactic category 24. A______ phonetics studies the perception of speech sounds.425. Any language is composed of three main elements: speech sounds, grammatical structure, and m____ .26. M______ is the study of word formation and the internal structure of words.27. The morphemes that cannot be used by themselves, but must be combined with other morphemes to form words car called b______ morphemes.28. Bound morphemes may be subdivided into derivational andi________ morphemes. 29. M_______ is the smallest meaningful unit of language.30. An independent unit of meaning that can be used freely by itself is called a f______ morpheme.31. According to its position in the new word, a______ are divided into two kinds: prefixes and suffixes.32. According to the transformational-generative grammar, every sentence has two structures. One is the deep structure; the other is the surface structure. and the surface structure comes from the deep structure through t________.33. Any sentences that share the same deep structure are said to be ________of one another. 34. XP may contain more than just X. For example, the NP “the boy who likes his puppy” consists of Det, N and S, with Det being the s______, N the head and S the complement.35. A c______ sentence contains two clauses joined by a linking word, such as “and”, “but”, “or”. 36. A______ is the movement of an auxiliary verb to the sentence-initial position, such as “be”, “have”, “do”etc.37.A c________ sentence contains two or more clauses, one of which is incorporated in the other. 38. The s____ function shows the relationshipbetween a linguistic form and other parts of the linguistic pattern in which it is used.39.The combination of two or sometimes more than two words to create new words is called c______.40. The study of linguistic meaning of words, phrases, and sentences is called s____ . 41.S________ can be simply defined as the study of meaning.42. The conceptualist view holds that there is no d______ link betweena linguistic form and what it refers to.43. The words \and \are similar in meaning and their semanticrelation is described as s________.44. Synonymy occurs when more than one form has the same meaning, but p________happens when the same form has more than one meaning.45. Componential analysis is a way to analyze the lexical meaning, which based on the belief that the meaning of a word can be dissected into meaning components called semantic f______.46. C ____ analysis is based upon the belief that the meaning of a word can be divided into meaning components.47.Whether a sentence is semantically meaningful is governed by rules called s________ restrictions, which are constraints on what lexical items can go with what others.48.R_________ opposites are pairs of words that exhibit the reversal of a relationship between the two items.49. When two words are identical in sound, but different in spelling and meaning, they are called h__________.50.That the denial of one member of two words implies the assertion of the other is the5characteristic of c________ antonyms.51. The sense relation between \52. Hyponymy is the relationship which obtains between specific and general lexical items. The word that is more general in meaning is called s______.53. “Go” and “come” are pair of words that exhibit the reversal ofa relationship between the two items. They are called r______ antonyms.54. The basic assumption underlying the theory of semantic field is that words do not exist in i________.55.Absolute synonyms are rare and most English synonyms are different in atleast one semantic feature of a type of meaning, for example, \adult \ and \\differ in s__________ meaning.56. R______ is what a linguistic form refers to in the real world; it is a matter of the relationship between form and the reality.57. Words that are close in meaning are called s________.58. H______ refers to a relation between two words, in which the meaning of one of the words includes the meaning of the other word.59. A word or sentence is a____ if it can be understood or interpreted in more than one way. 60. Sentences with the same truth conditions are p____ .61. The sentence \ The ambiguity iscaused by the word \62. The words \and \have the same conceptual meaning but their c________ meaning are different.63.When the study of meaning is conducted, not in isolation, but in the context of use, it becomes another branch of linguistic study called ______64. Stating, commanding, warning, informing and the like are a____, because they are sentences uttered in certain contexts, under certain conditions and with certain intonations.65. Semantics studies linguistic meaning while Pragmatics studies s____ meaning. 66. The c____ of an utterance determine its meaning.67. Language is one of the important means of communication. In communication, when people utter sentences they also perform a____ of various kinds, such as stating, asking, commanding and promising.68. Conversational i______ may arise as a result of a speaker's violation of the cooperational principle.69.While the meaning of a sentence is abstract and decontextualized, that of an u________ is concrete and context-dependent.70. Any sentences that share the same deep structure are said to be p________of one another.6。