Unit 1. The Study of Language
Unit 1. The Study of Language
1.2.2 Subfields
Objectives
1. Define Language;
2. Explain the importance of language and identify the branches of Linguistics; and
Points to Remember
LANGUAGE is an expression of ideas by means of speech-sounds combined into words. Words are combined into
sentences, this combination answering to that of ideas into thoughts (Henry Sweet, an English phonetician and language
scholar)
2. Contrastive linguistics - It concentrates upon the differences between languages. Its findings are often
applied in the context of language teaching.
3. Comparative linguistics - It studies different languages looking for similar characteristics. These
languages may have common historical origin though the main emphasis of the analysis is usually placed
on the structural correspondences between languages under investigation.
4. Historical linguistics - It analyses the development of language in time, registering the changes that
have taken place in it.
5. Applied linguistics -It is concerned with the application of linguistic theories and their findings in
solving various language problem, mostly in the teaching of foreign languages, studying language
disorders, in translations, lexicography, stylistics.
6. Sociolinguistics - It studies the relationship between language and society, taking into consideration
standard and non-standard forms of language, regional and social varieties with reference to such
concepts as ethnicity, social status, sex, age, etc.
8. Computational linguistics
9. Developmental linguistics
Unit 1. The Study of Language
10. Anthropological linguistics
c) all languages can create new words when required and modify their meanings;
d) all languages are open-ended in the sense that they can produce totally new utterances which are understood by
the users of the language;
f) in all languages it is possible to talk about things and situations that are removed from the immediate situation of
the speaker (this is called displacement);
g) in all languages we can use hypothetical, unreal, and fictional utterances.
Language is systematic.
Language is stagnant.
Language is comprehensive.
Language is certain.
Language is universal.
Language is irrational.
Language is influential.
Language is dynamic.
Structuralism - It is a term used in linguistics referring to a theoretical approach to the analysis of language
that describes linguistics items in terms of structure.