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Chapter 1 What Is Language

The document is a chapter from an introduction to language course that discusses what defines human language. It explains that language is distinguished from other forms of communication by its discreteness and ability to displace messages from the present context. The chapter explores the components of linguistic knowledge around sounds, words, sentences and grammar to illustrate what constitutes human language.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views29 pages

Chapter 1 What Is Language

The document is a chapter from an introduction to language course that discusses what defines human language. It explains that language is distinguished from other forms of communication by its discreteness and ability to displace messages from the present context. The chapter explores the components of linguistic knowledge around sounds, words, sentences and grammar to illustrate what constitutes human language.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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TON DUC THANG UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF FOREIGN LANGUAGES


DIVISION OF LINGUISTICS, LITERATURE & CULTURAL STUDIES

INTRODUCTION TO LANGUAGE - 001164

CHAPTER 1: What is language?

Lecturer: Le Thi Phuong

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CHAPTER 1 CONTENTS

I. Linguistic knowledge
II. What is grammar?
III. What is not (human) language?

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KNOWING A LANGUAGE?

• Language distinguishes humans from other animals

• Understanding the nature of language makes us human

• In myths and religions, language is the source of human


life and power

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KNOWING A LANGUAGE? (CONT.)

• Learning language  child becoming human (Africa)

• We all become “human” because we all know at least


one language

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LINGUISTIC KNOWLEDGE

1. Knowledge of the sound system

2. Knowledge of words

3. Knowledge of sentences and nonsentences

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KNOWLEDGE OF THE SOUND SYSTEM

• Knowing what sounds are in that language and


what sounds are not
E.g: English: /tʃ/, /ʃ/ ≠ Vietnamese

• Knowing which sounds may start / end a word,


and follow each other
E.g: In Ghanaian, Nk can begin a word: Nkrumah
≠ not in English
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KNOWLEDGE OF WORDS

• Knowing that certain sequences of sounds signify


certain concepts or meanings
E.g: boy: not girl
• Knowing which sequences of sounds are related to
specific meanings and which are not
E.g: boy, toy: words ≠ moy: not a word

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THE ARBITRARY RELATION OF
FORM & MEANING

• The relationship between speech sounds and the meanings they


represent is arbitrary
E.g. In English, house signifies the concept
In French, maison
In Russian, dom
In Vietnamese, nhà
=> The words of a particular language have the meanings, they
do only by convention.

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THE ARBITRARY RELATION OF
FORM & MEANING (CONT.)

• Some sound symbolism in language: words whose


pronunciation suggest the meaning

=> onomatopoeic words

E.g: Buzz – sound of bee

Cock-a-doodle-doo: sound of a rooster

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THE ARBITRARY RELATION OF
FORM & MEANING (CONT.)
• Some particular sound sequences seem to relate to a
particular concept.
E.g.: gl (related to sight): glare, glint, gleam, glitter, glaze,
glimpse …
ÞWords like that: a small part of any language and not
always the case
E.g: gl: globe, glucose …

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THE CREATIVITY OF LINGUISTIC KNOWLEDGE

• Knowing a language -> combine sounds to form words,


words to form phrases, and phrases to form sentences
=> infinite/ limitless number of possible sentences
-> Creativity: being able to produce new sentences and to
understand sentences never heard before.
=> Creative aspect of language use
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THE CREATIVITY OF LINGUISTIC KNOWLEDGE
(CONT.)

• Creativity is a universal property of


human language.

Avram Noam Chomsky,


American linguist (age 86)
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KNOWLEDGE OF SENTENCES &
NONSENTENCES
• Knowledge of words is not enough
E.g:
a. John is difficult to love.
b. It is difficult to love John.
c. John is anxious to go.
d. It is anxious to go John.

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KNOWLEDGE OF SENTENCES &
NONSENTENCES (CONT.)

• Linguistic knowledge also includes rules for forming


sentences => permit us to form and understand an
infinite set of new sentences

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KNOWLEDGE OF SENTENCES &
NONSENTENCES (CONT.)

• Our knowledge of language allows us to separate


possible sentences from nonsentences

E.g: What he did was climb a tree.

What he thought was want a sports car.

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KNOWLEDGE OF SENTENCES &
NONSENTENCES (CONT.)

• A language then consists of all the sounds, words,


and infinitely many possible sentences

• When you know a language, you know the sounds,


words, and the rules for their combination

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LINGUISTIC KNOWLEDGE & PERFORMANCE
• Knowledge: what we know about a language (linguistic
competence)
-Mostly unconscious knowledge about sounds, structures, meanings,
words, and rules for combining linguistic elements
• Performance: how we use this knowledge in actual
speech production and comprehension
- We can theoretically create an infinitely long sentence but
physiological and psychological constraints make this impossible

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WHAT IS GRAMMAR?

• Grammar = the knowledge speakers have about the


units and rules of their language. These rules include:

Phonology Rules for combining sounds into words


Morphology Rules of word formation
Syntax Rules for combining words into phrases and
phrases into sentences
Semantics Rules for assigning meaning

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WHAT IS GRAMMAR? (CONT.)

• Descriptive grammar is a set of rules about language based


on how it is actually used
- A descriptive grammar describes the linguistic rules that people
use when they speak their language
- There is no right or wrong language
- Grammars from every language and dialect are equal

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WHAT IS GRAMMAR? (CONT.)

• Prescriptive grammar: a set of rules about language


based on how people think language should be used.
• In a prescriptive grammar there is right and wrong
language.
• The view of a prescriptive grammarian is that some
grammars are better than others

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WHAT IS GRAMMAR? (CONT.)

•  During the Renaissance, a middle class of English


speakers wished to talk like the upper class, so they
started buying handbooks that told them how to speak
“properly”
–  Bishop Robert Lowth’s A Short Introduction to English
Grammar with Critical Notes (1762)

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WHAT IS GRAMMAR? (CONT.)

“I don’t have none.” vs. “I don’t have any.”


• Lowth decided that “two negatives makes a
positive,” therefore people should not use
double negatives
–  Despite the fact that everybody was already using
double negatives in English (and communication was
just fine)
–  Despite the fact that many languages of the world
require the use of double negatives

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WHAT IS GRAMMAR? (CONT.)

In this book, from linguistic perspective:


• All languages and dialects are rule-governed, whether
spoken by the rich or poor, powerful or weak, learned or
illiterate
• No languages and dialects are superior or inferior

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WHAT IS NOT (HUMAN) LANGUAGE?

2 fundamental properties that distinguish human language and


animal communication:

• Discreteness

• Displacement

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WHAT IS NOT (HUMAN) LANGUAGE? (CONT.)

#1: Discreteness
+ discrete units- sounds, words, phrases that are combined to
make infinite set of expressions.
i.e. the word top => pot, opt
The cat on the mat => the mat on the cat.
=> Discreteness => creativity of human language

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WHAT IS NOT (HUMAN) LANGUAGE? (CONT.)
• Some species communicate vocally, i.e. Birds:
+ Birdcalls (one or more short notes) –danger, feeding, nesting,

+ Birdsongs (more complex pattern of notes) – stake out territory,
attract mates …
• No evidence of internal structures to these songs (can’t broken
into discrete meaningful parts and rearranged to encode
different messages)
=> The message conveyed by these songs and calls are limited.

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WHAT IS NOT (HUMAN) LANGUAGE? (CONT.)
#2.Displacement:
• Human can talk message that are unrelated to here and now.
Our words & sentences: not simply responses to internal and
external stimuli
E.g: When tired -> yawn, say I’m tired, I’m going to bed …
-> Or you can stay silent, or talk about things
completely unrelated to your physical state – weather, movie you
saw last night …
• Human can talk about things far away in the past, on the moon,
abstract things they have never seen or will never see.
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HOMEWORK

• Complete all the tasks in Further practice (Handout


Chapter 1)
• Do Assignment 1 (TDT E-Learning System)
• Have the assigned reading materials read:
Fromkin, V., Rodman, R., & Hyams, N., [2014], An
Introduction to Language, Tenth Edition, Cengage
Learning, New York.
Pages: 35-49; 56-60

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