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Syed Mohsin Rizvi M.A English Roll No.40

Language and thought relationship

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Page 1: Language and thought relationship

Syed Mohsin Rizvi M.A English

Roll No.40

Page 2: Language and thought relationship

A system of symbols for thinking and communicating

Sentence meaning: Word sense• Semantic meaning• Perceptual meaning• Syntactic meaning• Pragmatic meaning

Tool• To clarify thinking• For social communication• To influence people• Word Sense

Page 3: Language and thought relationship

Language live, change, and die E.g., Latin – a ‘dead’ language English

• Old English , AD 700-1050• Middle English AD 1050-1450• Early Modern English, AD 1450-1700• Modern English, 1700-Present

Page 4: Language and thought relationship

Faeder ureThu the eart on

henofonum,Si thin name

gehalgod.Tobecume thin rice.Gewurthe thin willa

on eorthan swa swa on heofonum.

Urne gedaeghwamlican hlaf syle you to daeg.

And forgyf you urne gyltas,swa swa you forgyfath urum gyltendum,

And ne gelaed thu you on costnunge, ac alys you of yfele, Sothlice.

Oure fadurThat art in

hauenes,Halewid be thi

name;This kyngdoom

come to;Be thi wile don in

erthe as in heuene; zyue to vs this dai oure breed ouer othir substanunce;

And forzyue to vs oure dettis, as you forzyuen to oure dettouris;

And lede vs not in to temptacioun,

But delyuere vs.from yeul. Amen.

Our FatherWhich art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come.Thy will be done, in earth, as it it is in heaven.Give us this day our daily bread.And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for Thine is the kingdom, and the power and the glory for ever. Amen.

Page 5: Language and thought relationship

Sounds Words Sentences

/oure/ /our/

Gyltas – dettis – debts/trespasses

Forgyf you urne gyltas, swa swa you forgyfath urum gyltendeumForzyue to vs oure dettis, as ou forzyuen to oure dettouris

Page 6: Language and thought relationship

Let one thing represent something else Words stand for or represent objects, ideas,

and other aspects of human experience’ System of spoken sounds and written

markings that we use to represent various aspects of our experience (p. 206)

Set of symbolic building blocks: • Sounds – letters• Words – objects, thoughts, feelings, actions,

concepts• Meaning – combination of all ideas feelings

associated with word

Page 7: Language and thought relationship

Create 2 columns: men and women.Write down all the words that you can think of

that we use to describe men’s body weight List all the words that you can think of to

describe women’s body weightGo back and mark whether the words are

negative or positive or neutralHow many positive words are there for women?

For men? Meanings of the words?What is the difference between denotative and

connotative meanings of words?

Page 8: Language and thought relationship

College education Happiness Freedom Creative Love Creativity What are some other “loaded words” that

conjure up different meanings?

Page 9: Language and thought relationship

Semantic meaning• Relationship between a linguistic event

and a nonlinguistic event• Denotative meaning – general properties

that determine the way the word is used Perceptual meaning

• Relationship between a linguistic event and an individual’s consciousness

• Connotative meaning – literal or basic meaning plus all it suggests

Page 10: Language and thought relationship

Syntactic meaning• Relationship of word to other words in a

sentence Content: words that express the major message of the

sentence Description: words that elaborate or modify the major

message Connection: words that join the major message of the

sentence Pragmatic meaning The person speaking and the situation

Page 11: Language and thought relationship

‘Twas brillig, and the slithy tovesDid gyre and gimble in the wabeAll mimsy were the borogoves,And the mome raths outgrabe.

“Beware the Jabberwock, my son!The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun The frumious Bandersnatch!”

He took his vorpal sword in hand:Long time the manxome foe he sought – So rested he by the Tumtum tree,And stood awhile in thought.…….

Page 12: Language and thought relationship

Abortion: pro-life, anti-abortion, pro-choice, pro-abortion

The Language of Cloning: human cloning, nuclear transplantation, therapeutic cellular transfer (TCT), cloned embryos, activated egg, cleaving egg, ovasome

Page 13: Language and thought relationship

Understand how language functions Read widely Analyze the work of highly regarded

writers who use word meanings accurately

Use action verbs, concrete nouns, vivid adjectives

Vary sentence length to keep the reader’s attention and create a variety of senetnce styles to enrich meaning

Use the full range of words to express yourself

Get feedback from other people

Page 14: Language and thought relationship

Action Verbs Concrete Nouns Vivid Adjectives

Pulled up Aluminum chairs wandering

Page 15: Language and thought relationship

Language reflects thinking and thinking is shaped by language.

Language is a tool powered by patterns of thinking.

Language has the power to represent thoughts, feelings, and experiences symbolically.

How well you perform one process (writing or speaking) is directly related to how well you perform the other (thinking).

Page 16: Language and thought relationship

Sloppy use of language (vague, general, indistinct, imprecise, foolish, inaccurate) leads to sloppy thinking.

Clear and precise language leads to clear and precise thinking.

Clear effective language vs. language that fails to help reader form a picture or understand the writer’s meaning.

Page 17: Language and thought relationship

I had a nice time yesterday. That is an interesting book. She is an old person. Pulp Fiction is a really funny movie about some

really unusual characters in California. The movie consists of several different stories that connectc up at different points. Some of the stories are nerve-racking and others are hilarious, but all of them are not very well done. The plots are very interesting, and the main characters are excellent. I liked this movie a lot.

Page 18: Language and thought relationship

Who? What? Where? When? How? Why? Use clear and precise language. An ecstatically entertaining piece of suave

mockery by Quentin Tarantino that revels in every manner of pulp flagrancy – murder and betrayal, drugs, sex and episodes of sardonically distanced sadomasochism – all told in three overlapping tales. It’s a very funky, American sort of pop masterpiece improbably, uproarious, with bright colors and danger and blood right on the surface.

Page 19: Language and thought relationship

Account of Avianca Flight 52 (p. 225) If the pilot of the airplane were alive,

how do you think he would analyze the cause of the crash?

How do the air traffic controllers and the FAA analyze the cause of the crash?

How do you analyze the cause of the crash? What reasons led you to that conclusion?

Page 20: Language and thought relationship

Different social contexts call for different language responses.

Familiarity – abbreviation of language style which identifies shared thinking and restricts group of people who can communicate within this context

Styles separate outsiders Use language to identify the social

contextg and to define the relationship between the people communicating

Page 21: Language and thought relationship

Rules and conventions given in handbooks and taught in school

Use of SAE represents membership in educated group

Lexical items, e.g., ‘bell curve’ ‘literary symbol’

Page 22: Language and thought relationship

Slang: a restrictive style of langauge that limits its speakers to a particular group

Jargon: words, expressions, technical terms that are intelligible to the professional circles or interest groups but not to the general public

Dialects: system of communication distinguished by sounds and markings among given groups of people

Page 23: Language and thought relationship

Euphemistic language: substituting a more pleasant less objectionable way of saying something for a blunt or more direct way

Emotive language: language that evokes feelings in people

Page 24: Language and thought relationship

The End