Linguistic For NET
Linguistic For NET
The following is the chronology of the ELT (English Language Teaching) method:
a) The Grammar-Translation Methods
b) The Direct Method
c) The Audio Lingual Method
d) The Silent Way
e) Desuggestopedia
f) Community language hearing
g) Total Physical Response
h) Communicative Language Teaching
e) Desuggestopedia
Noam Chomsky
(1949-2008)
Avram Noam Chomsky is an American linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist,
historian, logician, social critic and political activist.
Noam Chomsky is described as ‘The Father of Modern Linguist’.
He is also a major figure in Analytic philosophy and one of the founders of the field of
“Cognitive Science”.
Linguistic Theory: Universal Grammar, Transformational generative grammar,
minimalist program.
Terms Invented by Chomsky
1. “Colourless Green Ideas Sleep Furiously”
This sentence was composed by Chomsky in his 1958 book “Syntactic
Structure” as an example of sentence that is grammatically correct but
syntactically nonsensical.
2. “Chomsky Hierarchy”
Chomsky Grammar is a containment hierarchy of classes of formal grammars.
This hierarchy was described by Chomsky in 1956.
Digital Infinity
It is a technical term in theoretical linguistics. This term explains the idea that all human
languages follow a simple logical principle, according to which a limited set of digits –
irreducible atomic sound elements are combined to produce an infinite range of
potentially meaningful expressions.
Formal Grammar
Formal Grammar is a set of production rules for strings in a formal language. The rules
describe, how to form strings from the languages alphabet that are valid according to
language’s syntax.
Generative Grammar
Minimalist Program
In linguistics the Minimalist program is a major line of enquiry that has been developing
inside generative Grammar since the early 1990’s starting with a 1993 paper by
Chomsky.
Plato’s Problem
The term given by Chomsky to “The problem of explaining how we can know so much”
given our limited experience.
Chomsky believes that Plato asked (Using modern terms), how we should account for
the rich, intrinsic, common structure of human cognition, when it seems undetermined by
extrinsic evidence presented to a person during human development.
Scansion
I. A. Richards
British literary critic Ivor Armstrong Richards (Pen name - Richie) is considered as one
of the founders of School of Interpretation known as "New Criticism".
His books especially The Meaning of Meaning (with C. K. Ogden in 1923), a pioneer
work on Semantics, Principles of Literary Criticism (1924), Practical Criticism (1929)
and The Philosophy of Rhetoric proved to be founding influences for the New
Criticism.
In The Foundation of Aesthetics (Co-authored by Richard Ogden & James Wood,
1922), I, A. Richard mapped out the principle of Aesthetic reception which lay at the
root of is literary theory.
In The Meaning and Meaning: A Study of the Influence of Language upon Thought
and of the Science of Symbolism, work out the triadic theory of Semantics (Richard
with C. K. Ogden)
Finally, in work The General Basic English Dictionary and Times of India Guide to
Basic English (1938)- Richards and Ogden developed their most internationally
influential projects – “English Program for the Development of an International
Language” (based with 850-words vocabulary).
Richards believed that if we read poetry and can make sense of it "in the degree in
which we can order ourselves, we need nothing more".
He gave his idea on the term ‘New Rhetoric’, which is about, how language works.
Meanings are decided by "How words are used".
3. Interpretation in Teaching
7. The General Basic English Dictionary (along with C. K. Ogden): 1930 with total
words: 850
Full title - Basic English: A General Introduction with Rules and Grammar.
The first word in the dictionary is 'a'.
1. Metaphor: When two things are said to be alike when they have different
properties. This is an ambiguity. (It is the foundation of New Criticism)
2. Two or more meanings are resolved into one.
3. Two ideas that are connected through context can be given in one word
simultaneously.
4. Two or more meanings that do not agree but combine to make clear a
complicated state of mind in the author.
5. When the author discovers his idea in the act of writing. Empson
describes a simile that lies halfway between two statements made by the
author.
6. When a statement says nothing and the readers are forced to invent a
statement of their own, most likely in conflict with that of the author.
7. Two words that within context are opposites that expose a fundamental
division in the authors mind.
W. K. Wimsatt
(1907 - 1975)
Note: Fallacy means mistake in thinking that keeps us away from real
understanding.