This document provides an overview of language, culture, and communication. It discusses key topics including:
- What language is and how it relates to sharing experiences and beliefs between generations.
- There are approximately 6,000 languages that are all organized in similar basic ways, using sounds or gestures.
- Linguistics is the study of language including phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax and grammar.
- One theory of the origin of language suggests early hominins began using gestures that evolved into spoken language over time.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Language, Culture and Communication
This document provides an overview of language, culture, and communication. It discusses key topics including:
- What language is and how it relates to sharing experiences and beliefs between generations.
- There are approximately 6,000 languages that are all organized in similar basic ways, using sounds or gestures.
- Linguistics is the study of language including phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax and grammar.
- One theory of the origin of language suggests early hominins began using gestures that evolved into spoken language over time.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lecture 2
Language, Culture and
Communication Chapter Outline
What is language? How is language related to culture? How did language begin? What Is Language?
A system for the communication, in
symbols, of any kind of information. Through language, people share their experiences, concerns, and beliefs and communicate these to the next generation. The Nature of Language
There are approximately 6,000
languages. All languages are organized in the same basic way. Spoken languages use sounds and rules for putting the sounds together. Sign languages use gestures rather than sounds. Linguistics
Linguistics is the study of all aspects of
language: – Phonetics – Phonology – Morphology – Syntax – Grammar Studying a Language
1. Isolate the phonemes, or the smallest
classes of sound that make a difference in meaning. 2. Determine all groups or combinations of sounds that seem to have meaning. 3. See how morphemes are put together to form phrases or sentences. The Biology of Human Speech The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis A language is not simply an encoding process but is rather a shaping force. Language guides thinking and behavior by predisposing people to see the world in a certain way. There has been a recent renewal of interest in this hypothesis. Origin of Language: One Theory Early hominines, began using gestures to communicate intentions within a social setting. When Homo erectus moved out of the tropics, they needed to plan and communicate to survive seasons of cold temperatures. By the time archaic Homo sapiens appeared, finely controlled movements of the mouth and throat had given rise to spoken language. Gesture-Call System
Inherited from our primate ancestors.
Gesture component consists of body motions used to convey messages. Call component consists of extralinguistic noises involving various voice qualities and vocalizations. Hidden Aspects of Communication Proxemics ____________________ DISTANCE BETWEEN TONE OF VOICE TYPE OF MESSAGE FACES
very close (3-6") soft whisper top secret or sensual
close (8-12") audible whisper very confidential
neutral (20-36") soft voice, low volume personal subject matter
neutral (4.5-5') full voice non-personal information
across the room (8-20') loud voice talking to a group
stretching the limits
(20-24' indoors and up to 100' outdoors) loud hailing voice departures and arrivals
Derived from The Silent Language by Edward Hall (1959)