One
Linguistics is the science of language, including the sounds,
words, and grammar rules. Words in languages are finite, but sentences are not.
It is this creative aspect of human language that sets it apart from animal
languages, which are essentially responses to stimuli.
Rules of a
language: phonology,
morphology, syntax, semantics, lexicon
The rules of a language, also called
grammar, are learned as one acquires a language. These rules include phonology,
the sound system, morphology, the structure of words, syntax, the
combination of words into sentences, semantics, the ways in which sounds
and meanings are related, and the lexicon, or mental dictionary of
words. When you know a language, you know words in that language, i.e. sound units
that are related to specific meanings. However, the sounds and meanings of
words are arbitrary. For the most
part, there is no relationship between the way a word is pronounced (or signed)
and its meaning.
Linguistic Competence and Performance
Knowing a language encompasses this
entire system, but this knowledge (called competence) is different from
behavior (called performance.) You may know a language, but you may also
choose to not speak it. Although you are not speaking the language, you still
have the knowledge of it. However, if you don't know a language, you cannot
speak it at all.
Descriptive and Prescriptive grammars
There are two types of grammars:
descriptive and prescriptive. Descriptive grammars represent the
unconscious knowledge of a language. English speakers, for example, know that
"me likes apples" is incorrect and "I like apples" is
correct, although the speaker may not be able to explain why. Descriptive
grammars do not teach the rules of a language, but rather describe rules that
are already known. In contrast, prescriptive grammars dictate what a
speaker's grammar should be and they include teaching grammars, which are
written to help teach a foreign language.
Universal Grammar
There are about 5,000 languages in
the world right now (give or take a few thousand), and linguists have
discovered that these languages are more alike than different from each other.
There are universal concepts and properties that are shared by all languages,
and these principles are contained in the Universal Grammar, which forms
the basis of all possible human languages.
Key terms
finite creative
stimuli grammar
phonology morphology
syntax semantics,
lexicon arbitrary
competence) performance
descriptive
grammars Universal Grammar
Questions
1.
What does a linguist study?
2.
What is linguistics?
3.
Words in languages are finite, but
sentences are not. What does it mean?
4.
What is included in grammar?
5.
The sounds and meanings of words are
arbitrary. What does it mean?
6.
What are
descriptive grammars and

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