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What is a linguist?

What is a linguist?

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What is a linguist?. The Linguists : A Movie. http://thelinguists.com/. Linguistics has many subfields. Phonetics Phonology Syntax Semantics Pragmatics Morphology. Phonetics. The study of minimal sound units of a language Example: beat, bit, bat. Phonology. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What is a linguist?

What is a linguist?

Page 2: What is a linguist?

The Linguists: A Movie

• http://thelinguists.com/

Page 3: What is a linguist?

Linguistics has many subfields

• Phonetics• Phonology• Syntax• Semantics• Pragmatics• Morphology

Page 4: What is a linguist?

Phonetics

• The study of minimal sound units of a language

• Example: beat, bit, bat

Page 5: What is a linguist?

Phonology

• The language-specific study of the distribution of speech soundsExample: Ptolemy

PterodactylCaptive

Example: thedogisplayinginthebackyardthe dog is playing in the back

yard

Page 6: What is a linguist?

Morphology

• Study of word formation(breaking down individual words into smaller parts)

UnbelieveabilityUngiraffelikeBaker vs. *erbakeNicley vs. *bookly

Page 7: What is a linguist?

Anytime you see a *it means you’re looking at an example that is

ungrammatical

Page 8: What is a linguist?

Syntax

• Study of how words combine to form phrases and sentences1) I will pick the package up at 8 o’clock. 2) At eight o’clock, I will pick the package up. 3) *Package up pick at o’clock will the eight I.4) *I will picks the package up at eight o’clock.

Page 9: What is a linguist?

Semantics

• The study of the ability of determine the meaning of sentences

• Couch vs. sofa• “duck”

• The green duck dawdled around the cactus.• The duck dawdled around the green cactus.• The platypus ducked under the sofa. • !The sofa ducked under the platypus.

Page 10: What is a linguist?

Anytime you see a !it means you’re looking at an example that is

semantically anomolous

Page 11: What is a linguist?

Pragmatics

• The study of meaning in context– Can you close the door? – What a beautiful cake!– “Dude, ‘sup?” vs. “Good morning, sir”– Chillaxin’ vs. resting

When greeting a professor, it would be pragmatically awkward to use “#Dude, ‘sup?”

Page 12: What is a linguist?

Anytime you see a #it means you’re looking at an example that is

pragmatically awkward

Page 13: What is a linguist?

POP QUIZ

A. SyntaxB. SemanticsC. PhoneticsD. PragmaticsE. PhonologyF. Morphology

1. Context2. Meaning3. Sentences4. Words5. Distribution of speech

sounds6. Minimal speech

sounds

Page 14: What is a linguist?

POP QUIZ

A. Ungrammatical

B. Semantically Anomolous

(meaning is weird)

C. Pragmatically Awkward (wouldn’t be used in that context)

1.#2.!3.*

Page 15: What is a linguist?

What linguists do besides teach?

• Document (Endangered) Languages• Work on voice recognition programs• Perfect spell-check/grammar check• Shape language-learning textbooks/software• Search through large quantities of texts

looking for new words

Page 16: What is a linguist?

LANGUAGEWhile linguistics has many facets, all linguists have one thing in common:

Page 17: What is a linguist?

What is language?

Get in groups of 2-3 and write your very best definition of language.

Page 18: What is a linguist?

Some stats about language

• 6,000 languages spoken in the world• But 90% of the population speaks only 10% of

them• Languages are very diverse, yet there are

many universal properties of languages• There are some characteristics shares by all

languages as well as characteristics that no language has

Page 19: What is a linguist?

Competence vs. Performance

• Competence = what we know about a language (hidden potential)

• Performance = what we produce (observable)• Walking analogy (even when you’re sitting,

you have the competence to walk)

Page 20: What is a linguist?

What language is NOT

• Language is not writing (p. 13) – Archeological evidence– Writing does not exist everywhere– Writing must be taught– Neurolinguistic evidence– Writing can be edited

• Language is not prescriptive grammar (p.14)

Page 21: What is a linguist?

Prescriptive vs. Descriptive

• Prescriptive grammar is the socially embedded notion of the “correct” or “proper” way to use a language

• Descriptive grammar describes what happens in a spoken language and, therefore, accepts the patterns a speaker uses without judgment

• (see page 16 for double negative example)• (for practice, see page 31, question 12)

Page 22: What is a linguist?

Design Features of a Languageby Charles Hockett

• Mode of communication• Semanticity• Pragmatic Function• Interchangeability• Cultural Transmission• Arbitrariness• Discreteness• Displacement• Productivity