INTRODUCTION TO LINGUISTICS
Linguistics
is the study of language - how it is put together and how it functions.
Various building blocks of different types and sizes are combined to
make up a language. Sounds are brought together and sometimes when this
happens, they change their form and do interesting things. Words are
arranged in a certain order, and sometimes the beginnings and endings of
the words are changed to adjust the meaning. Then the meaning itself
can be affected by the arrangement of words and by the knowledge of the
speaker about what the hearer will understand. Linguistics is the study
of all of this. There are various branches of linguistics which are
given their own name, some of which are described below. Linguistics are people who study linguistics.
Phonetics is the study of the sounds of speech. It
includes understanding how sounds are made using the mouth, nose, teeth
and tongue, and also understanding how the ear hears those sounds and
can tell them apart. A study of phonetics involves practicing producing
(sometimes exotic) sounds, and figuring out which sound you heard. The
wave form of each sound can be analysed with the help of computer
programs. In sign language, phonetics refers to the the possible shapes,
movements and use of physical space.
Phonology makes use of the phonetics in order to see
how sounds or signs are arranged in a system for each language. In
phonology, it matters whether sounds are contrastive or not, that is,
whether substituting one sound for another gives a different, or
"contrastive," meaning. For example in English, [r] and [l] are two
different sounds - and the words "road" and "load" differ according to
which of these sounds is used. But in some languages, [r] and [l] are
variations of the same sound. They could never make a meaning difference
in words that differ by only that sound. Phonologists describe the
contrastive consonants and vowels in a language, and how pronunciation
is affected by the position of the sound in the word and the sounds that
are nearby. They are also interested in syllables, phrases, rhythm,
tone, and intonation.
Morphology looks at how individual words are formed
from smaller chunks of meaningful units called morphemes. For example,
the English word 'untied' is really made up of three parts, one refering
to the process of reversing an action (un-), one indicating the action
of twisting stringlike things together so they stay (tie), and the last
indicating that the action happened in the past (-d). Many languages
have a much more complex way of putting words together. Morphology
interacts in important ways with both phonology (bringing sounds
together can cause them to change) and syntax, which needs to pay
attention to the form of a word when it combines it with other words.
Syntax is the study of how phrases, clauses and
sentences are constructed and combined in particular languages. Writing a
grammar requires defining the rules that govern the structure of the
sentences of the language. Such rules involve both the order of words,
and the form of words in their various possible positions. There are
common patterns among even unrelated languages, and many linguists
believe this is the result of general principles which apply to most, if
not all, languages. For example, languages where the direct object
generally follows the verb have a lot of things in common, in contrast
to the things in common held by languages in which the direct object
generally precedes the verb.
Discourse analysis looks at bigger chunks of language - texts, conversations, stories, speeches, etc.
Different types of these use language differently, and there can even
be differences in how a language is used based on the genre. For
example, "Once upon a time" is an appropriate start to a fairy tale, but
not to a news story on the evening news. Discourse features can also
show important principles of organization such as which players in a
story have key roles and which just have bit parts.
Semantics is
the study of meaning. It focuses on the relation between words, phrases
and other bits of language and on how these words and phrases connect
to the world.
Pragmatics is
similar, but it involves the study of how speakers of a language use
the language to communicate and accomplish what they want. Pragmatics
looks more at the relationship between speaker and listener which allows
assumptions to be made about the intended message, considering, for
example, the way context contributes to meaning. A classic example is
where someone is asked "Do you want some coffee?" Does the reply "Coffee
will keep me awake" mean yes or no? It depends whether the person wants
to stay awake - and the questioner will only understand the intended
meaning if they know whether the person wants to stay awake.
Historical Linguistics
is the study of how languages have changed over time. Some changes
happen because of slow (maybe incremental) changes within the language,
such as in pronunciation or in the meaning of a word. Other changes
happen because of contact with speakers of other languages. The most
well know example of this is "borrowing," but language contact can cause
other types of change as well. It can be interesting to compare
phonology, syntax and word lists of similar or geographically
close languages to see how similar they are. Some linguists then use
this information to figure out the past of the languages, such as when
two languages split from each other. Combined with other known facts
about the speakers of the language, it can lead to important discoveries
about their history.
Sociolinguistics is the study of society and
language. Sociolinguists may use surveys to examine in which contexts a
language is used (e.g. market, home, school, workplace) and the
attitudes to each language (particularly in multilingual contexts). They
may look at ways that variation in a particular language correlates
with social factors such as speaker age, ethnic identity, location, etc.
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