语言学笔记(上课的笔记)
《语言学教程》中文笔记(完整)
语言学教程笔记第一章语言学导论语言的定义特征:从本质上将人类语言与动物语言区分开的人类语言的区别性特点。
1. 任意性:任意性是指语言符号的形式与所表示的意义没有天然的联系,任意性是语言的核心特征。
例如,我们无法解释为什么一本书读作 a /buk/,一支钢笔读作a /pe n/。
任意性具有不同层次:(1)语素音义关系的任意性。
(2)句法层面上的任意性。
(3)任意性和规约性。
2. 二层性:二层性是指拥有两层结构的这种特性,上层结构的单位由底层结构的元素构成,每层都有自身的组合规则。
话语的组成元素是本身不传达意义的语音,语音的唯一作用就是相互组合构成有意义的单位,比如词。
因为底层单位是无意的,而上层单位有明确的意义,所以我们把语音叫做底层单位,与词等上层单位相对。
二层性使语言拥有了一种强大的能产性。
3. 创造性:创造性指语言的能产性,指语言有制造无穷长句的潜力,这来源于语言的二层性和递归性。
利用二重性说话者可以通过组合基本语言单位,无止境地生成句子,大多数都是以前没有过的或没有听过的。
4. 移位性:是指人类语言可以让使用者在交际时用语言符号代表时间上和空间上并不可及的物体、时间或观点。
因此我们可以提及孔子或北极,虽然前者已经去世两千五百五十多年而后者位置距我们非常之远。
语言使我们能够谈及已不存在或还未出现的事物。
移位性赋予人们的概括与抽象能力使人类受益无穷。
词在指称具体物体时,并不总是出现在即时、形象化的语境中。
他们通常为了体现指称含义而被使用。
5. 文化传递性:语言不是靠遗传,而是通过文化传递的。
6. 互换性:指人可以是信息的发出者,也可以是信息的接受者,即人作为说话者和听话者的角色是可以随意更换的。
元语言功能:我们的语言可以用来讨论语言本身。
比如说,我可以用“书”指代一本书,也可以用“书这个词”来指代“书”这个词本身。
这使语言具有无限的自我反身性:人类可以谈论“说话”,也可以思考“思考"。
语言学纲要(重点笔记)
语言学概论•绪论•一、语言学的概念•1、语言:是一种特殊的社会现象,是人类最重要的交际工具,是人类的思维工具。
•2、语言学:以语言为研究对象的科学,研究探索语言的本质、结构和发展规律。
•二、关于语言学课程•本课程是中文专业必修的基础理论课之一,主要内容:语言在社会中的地位和作用;语言的结成体系(语音、语汇和语义、语法、文字、修辞);语言的发展变化;语言的应用。
•学生通过本课程的学习,能比较系统地掌握语言学的基本概念、基本理论和基础知识,为提高语言理论水平、进一步学习和深入研究其他语言课程奠定必要的语言理论基础。
•三、语言学的三大发源地•中国、印度、希腊-罗马•1、中国古代的语言学•语文学:主要是为古代经典书面著作作注释,目的是使人们可以读懂古书的一门尚未独立的学科。
也是偏重从文献角度研究语言文字的学科总称,一般包括文字学、训诂学、音韵学、校勘学等。
中国由于古代文献丰富,文字比较特殊,语文学比较发达,广义的语文学也应该包括语言学,也就是语言学和文字学的总称,但现在由于国际学术分科中语言学是一大类,所以目前反而是语文学从属于语言学,成为语言学的一个分支。
•小学•2、印度的语言学成就•特点:不是重于理论,而是基于观察。
所讨论的理论基本上与文学研究与哲学争论有关。
词的性质和句子意义被经常讨论,句子与其所包含的词之间的语义关系,也是经常讨论的问题之一。
•贡献:A、区分了外显即时表达和内含永久主体。
认为语言有两种,一是具体场合说的话,一是抽象的语言原则。
B、语音学和音位学方面有突出成就。
认为语音是连接语言和话语之间的桥梁,语音描写分三部分:发音过程、语音的组成成分(元音,辅音)、语音在音位结构中的结合。
C、语法描写和分析方面有突出成就。
潘尼尼在著作中详细的描述了各种屈折变化、派生现象、组织结构和各种句法的用法。
•印度学者在词法研究方面取得了很大的成就:他们在分析词的构成时发现了¡°词根¡±、¡°后缀¡±与¡°词尾¡±三种主要造词单位。
胡壮麟《语言学教程》笔记1-3章
胡壮麟语言学重难点Chapter 1 Invitations to Linguistics常考考点:1. 语言: 语言的定义;语言的基本特征;语言的功能;语言的起源2. 语言学:语言学的定义;现代语言学与传统语法学研究的三个显著区别;语言学研究的四个原则及简要说明;语言学中的几组重要区别;每组两个概念的含义、区分及其意义;普通语言学的主要分支学科及各自的研究范畴;宏观语言学及应用语言学的主要分支及各自的研究范畴。
1. 语言的定义特征1.1. 任意性1.2. 二重性1.3. 创造性1.4. 移位性1.5. 文化传递性1.6. 互换性2. 语言的功能1.1. 信息功能1.2. 人际功能1.3. 施为功能1.4. 感情功能1.5. 寒暄功能1.6. 娱乐功能1.7. 元语言功能3. 微观语言学3.1. 语音学3.2. 音系学3.3. 形态学3.4. 句法学3.5. 语义学3.6. 语用学4. 宏观语言学4.1. 心理语言学4.2. 社会语言学4.3. 应用语言学4.4. 计算语言学4.5. 神经语言学5. 重要概念及其区分5.1. 描写式&规定式5.2. 共时&历时5.3. 语言&言语5.4. 语言能力&语言应用5.5. 唯素的&唯位的5.6. 传统语法&现代语法5.7. 语言潜势&实际语言行为Chapter 2 Speech Sounds常考考点:1. 语音学语音学的定义;发音器官的英文名称;英语辅音的定义;发音部位、发音方法和分类;英语元音的定义和分类;基本元音;发音语音学;听觉语音学;声学语音学;语音标记,国际音标;严式与宽式标音法2. 音系学音系学的定义;音系学与语音学的联系与区别;音素、音位、音位变体、最小对立体、自由变体的定义;音位理论;自由变异;音位的对立分布于互补分布;语音的相似性;区别性特征;超语段音位学;音节;重音;音高和语调。
胡壮麟语言学笔记
Language can be used to refer to contexts removed from the immediate situations of the speaker.
⑸Cultural transmission
Human capacity for language has a genetic basis, but we have to be taught and learned the details of any language system. this showed that language is culturally transmitted. not by instinct. animals are born with the capacity to produce the set of calls peculiar to their species.
Hall----language is the institution whereby humans communicate and interact with each other by means of habitually used oral-auditory arbitrary symbols.
8.共时语言学Synchronical linguistics
The study of a given language at a given time.
9.语言langue
The abstract linguistic system shared by all members of a speech community.
The fact that different languages have different words for the same object is a good illustration of the arbitrary nature of language, it’s only our tacit agreement of utterance and concept at work and not any innate relationship bound up in the utterance.
英语语言学笔记
英语语言学笔记Chapter one 学点语言学语言学是对语言的系统研究,对于一个学习英语的人来说,应该懂一点语言学的知识,它可以在理论上对学习语言有指导作用,有助于更好的学习语言。
The Goals for this CourseTo get a scientific view on language;To understand some basic theories on linguistics;To understand the applications of the linguistic theories, especially in the fields of language teaching & learning (SLA or TEFL), cross-cultural communication……;To prepare for the future research work.The Requirements for this courseClass attendanceClassroom discussionFulfillment of the assignmentExaminationReference Books戴炜栋,何兆熊,(2002),《新编简明英语语言学教程》,上海外语教育出版社。
胡壮麟,(2001),《语言学教程》,北京大学出版社。
胡壮麟,李战子,《语言学简明教程》,北京大学出版社刘润清,(1995),《西方语言学流派》,外语教学与研究出版社。
Fromkin,V. & R. Rodman, (1998), An Introduction to Language the sixth edition, Orlando, Florida: Holt, Ranehart & Winston, Inc.许国璋先生认为把语言定义成交际工具不够科学,至少不够严谨.他对语言的定义做了如下概括:语言是一种符号系统.当它作用于人与人之间的关系的时候,它是表达相互反应的中介;当它作用于人与客观世界的关系的时候,它是认知事物的工具;当它作用于文化的时候,它是文化的载体.Teaching aims: let the students have the general idea about language and linguistics.Teaching difficulties: design features of language; some important distinctions in linguisticsWhy do we study language?A tool for communicationAn integral part of our life and humanityIf we are not fully aware of the nature and mechanism of our language, we will be ignorant of what constitutes our essential humanity.What can language mean?Language can meanwhat a person says (e.g. bad language, expressions)the way of speaking or writi ng (e.g. Shakespeare‘s language, Luxun‘s language)a particular variety or level of speech or writing (e.g. language for special purpose, colloquial language)the abstract system underlying the totality of the speech/writing behavior of a community (e.g.Chinese language, first language)the common features of all human languages (e.g. He studies language)a tool for human communication. (social function)a set of rules. (rule-governed)The origins of language---the myth of languageThe Biblical accountLan guage was God‘s gift to human beings.The bow-wow theoryLanguage was an imitation of natural sounds, such as the cries of animals, like quack, cuckoo. The pooh-pooh theory Language arose from instinctive emotional cries, expressive of pain or joy.The yo-he-ho theoryLanguage arose from the noises made by a group of people engaged in joint labour or effort –lifting a huge hunted game, moving a rock, etc.The evolution theoryLanguage originated in the process of labour and answered the call of social need.Functions of language – three meta-functions by HallidayThe ideational functionTo identify things, to think, or to record information.The interpersonal functionTo get along in a community.The textual functionTo form a text.Functions of languagePhatic: establishing an atmosphere or maintaining social contact.Directive: get the hearer to do something.Informative: give information about facts.Interrogative: get information from others.Expressive: express feelings and attitudes of the speaker.Evocative: create certain feelings in the hearer (amuse, startle, soothe, worry or please) Performative: language is used to do things, to perform actions.What is LanguageLanguage is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used forhuman communication.What is communication?A process in which information is transmitted from a source (sender or speaker) to a goal (receiver or listener).A system----elements in it are arranged according to certain rules. They cannot be arranged at will.e.g. He the table cleaned. (×) bkli (×)Arbitrary----there is no intrinsic (logic) connection between a linguistic form and its meaning. Symbols----words are just the symbols associated with objects, actions, and ideas by convention. V ocal--------the primary medium for all languages is sound, no matter how well developed theirwriting systems are.Writing systems came into being much later than the spoken forms.People with little or no literacy can also be competent language users.Human ----language is human-specific.Human beings have different kinds of brains and vocal capacity.“Language Acquisition Device‖(LAD)Design features of language 语言的结构特征Design features refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication.a. arbitrariness----the form of linguistic signs bear no natural relationship to their meaning. The link between them is a matter of convention.E.g. ―house‖ uchi (Japanese)Mansion (French)房子(Chinese)conventionality----It means that in any language there are certain sequences of sounds that have a conventionally accepted meaning. Those words are customarily used by all speakers with the same intended meaning and understood by all listeners in the same way.There are two different schools of belief concerning arbitrariness. Most people, especially structural linguists believe that language is arbitrary by nature. Other people, however, hold that language is iconic, that is, there is a direct relation or correspondence between sound and meaning, such as onomatopoeia.(cuckoo; crash)For the majority of animal signals, there does appear to be a clear connection between the conveyed message and the signal used to convey it, And for them, the sets of signals used in communication is finite.b. duality----language is simultaneously organized at two levels or layers, namely, the level of sounds and that of meaning.the higher level ----words which are meaningfulthe lower or the basic level----sounds which are meaningless, but can be grouped and regrouped into words.Dog: woof (but not ―w-oo-f ‖ )This duality of levels is, in fact, one of the most economical features of human language, since with a limited set of distinct sounds we are capable of producing a very large number of sound combinations (e.g. words) which are distinct in meaning.The principle of economyc. Creativity----language is resourceful. It makes possible the construction and interpretation of new signals by its users.(novel utterances are continually being created.)non-human signals ,on the other hand, appears to have little flexibility.e.g. an experiment of bee communication:The worker bee, normally able to communicate the location of a nectar source , will fail to do so if the location is really ?new‘. In one exper iment, a hive of bees was placed at the foot of a radio tower and a food source at the top. Ten bees were taken to the top, shown the food source, and sentoff to tell the rest of the hive about their find. The message was conveyed via a bee dance and the whole gang buzzed off to get the free food. Theyflow around in all directions, but couldn‘t locate the food. The problem may be that bee communication regarding location has a fixed set of signals, all of which related to horizontal distance. The bee cann ot create a ?new ‘ message indicating vertical distance.d. Displacement----human languages enable their users to symbolize objects, events and concepts which are not present at the moment of communication.Bee communication:When a worker bee finds a source of nectar and returns to the hive, it can perform a complex dance routine to communicate to the other bees the location of this nectar. Depending on the type of dance (round dance for nearby and tail-wagging dance, with variable tempo, for further away and how far), The other bees can work put where this newly discovered feast can be found. Bee communication has displacement in an extremely limited form. However, it must be the most recent food source.e. Cultural transmission----genetic transmissionYou acquire a language in a culture with other speakers and not from parental genes.The process whereby language is passed on from one generation to the next is described as cultural transmission.f. interchangeability: it means that individuals who use a language can both send and receive any permissible message within that communication system. Human beings can be a producer as well as receiver of messages.What is Linguistics(语言学)Linguistics is a scientific study of language .It is a major branch of social science.Linguistics studies not just one language of any society, but the language of all human society, language in general.A scientific study is one which is based on the systematic investigation of data, conducted with reference to some general theory of language structure.Process of linguistic study:①Certain linguistic facts are observed, generalization are formed;②Hypotheses are formulated;③Hypotheses are tested by further observations;④A linguistic theory is cons tructed.observation------generalization-----hypothesis------tested by further observation------theoryPerson who studies linguistics is known as a linguist.The Scope of LinguisticsGeneral linguistics is the study of language as a whole.Internal branches: intra-disciplinary divisions (micro-linguistics)Phonetics(语音学) is the branch of linguistics which studiesthe characteristics of speech sounds and provides methods for their description, classification and transcription.Phonology(音韵学) is the branch of linguistics which studies the sound patterns of languages. Morphology(词法) is the branch of linguistics which studies the form of words.Syntax(句法) is the branch of linguistics which studies the rules governing the combination of words into sentences.Semantics(语义学) is the branch of linguistics which studies the meaning of language. Pragmatics(语用学) is the branch of linguistics which studies the meaning of language in use.External branches: inter-disciplinary divisions (macro-linguistics)Applied linguistics(应用语言学) is the study of the teaching of foreign and second languages. Sociolinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and society. Psycholinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and the mind.Historical Linguistics(历史语言学) is the study of language changes.Anthropological linguistics(人文语言学) uses the theories and methods of anthropology to study language variation and language use in relation to the cultural patterns and beliefs of man. Neurolinguistics(神经语言学) studies the neurological basis of language development and use in human beings.Mathematical linguistics(数学语言学) studies the mathematical features of language, often employing models and concepts of mathematics.Computational linguistics(计算语言学) is an approach to linguistics in which mathematical techniques and concepts(概念) are applied, often with the aid of a computer.Features of linguisticsDescriptiveDealing with spoken languageSynchronicSome Basic Distinctions(区分) in Linguistics1. Speech and WritingOne general principle(原则) of linguistic analysis is the primacy of speech over writing. Writing gives language new scope(范畴) and uses that speech does not have.2. Descriptive(描述性) or Prescriptive(说明性)A linguistic study is descriptive if it describes and analyses facts observed; it is prescriptive if it tries to lay down rules for "correct" behavior.3. Synchronic(共时) and Diachronic(历时) StudiesThe description of a language at some point in time is a synchronic study and The description of a language as it changes through time is a diachronic study.4. Langue(语言) and Parole(言语)This is a distinction made by the Swiss linguist F.De Saussure (索绪尔)early last century. langue refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community and parole refers to the actualized(实际的) language, or realization of langue.5. Competence(能力)and Performance(行为)Competence is the ideal language user's knowledge of the rules of his language. Performance is the actual realization of this knowledge in utterances(发声).6. Potential and Behavior: English linguist Halliday makes another similar distinction in the 1960s, namely the distinction between linguistic potential and linguistic behavior. He approaches language from a functional view and concentratesprimarily on what speakers do with languagewhich led to the distinction between linguistic potential (what speakers can do with language) and behavior (what speakers actually do with language). In H alliday‘s distinction between potential and behavior, potential is similar to Saussure‘s ―langue‖ and Chomsky‘s competence, and behavior is similar to Saussure‘s ―parole‖ and Chomsky‘s performance.7. Modern linguistics started with the publication of F. d e Saussure‘ s book ―Course in General Linguistics‖ in the early 20th century. So Saussure is often described as ―father of modern linguistics‖.The general approach traditionally formed to the study of language before that is roughly referred to as ―traditional grammar.‖ They differ in several basic ways:Firstly, linguistics is descriptive while traditional grammar is prescriptive. A linguist is interested in what is said, not in what he thinks ought to be said. He describes language in all its aspects, but does not prescribe rules of ―correctness‖.Secondly, modern linguistics regards the spoken language as primary, not the written. Traditional grammarians, on the other hand, tend to emphasize, may be over-emphasize, the importance of the written word, partly because of its permanence.Then, modern linguistics differs from traditional grammar also in that it does not force languages into a Latin-based framework. To modern linguists ,it is unthinkable to judge one language by standards of another. They are trying to set up a universal framework, but that would be based on the features shared by most of the languages used by mankind.Chapter I IntroductionI. Decide whether each of the following statements is True or False:1. Linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.2.Linguistics studies particular language, not languages in general.3. A scientific study of language is based on what the linguist thinks.4. In the study of linguistics, hypotheses formed should be based on language facts and checked against the observed facts.5. General linguistics is generally the study of language as a whole.6. General linguistics, which relates itself to the research of other areas, studies the basic concepts, theories, descriptions, models and methods applicable in any linguistic study.7. Phonetics is different from phonology in that the latter studies the combinations of the sounds to convey meaning in communication.8. Morphology studies how words can be formed to produce meaningful sentences.9. The study of the ways in which morphemes can be combined to form words is called morphology.10. Syntax is different from morphology in that the former not only studies the morphemes, but also the combination of morphemes into words and words into sentences.11. The study of meaning in language is known as semantics.12. Both semantics and pragmatics study meanings.13. Pragmatics is different from semantics in that pragmatics studies meaning not in isolation, but in context.14.Social changes can often bring about language changes.15. Sociolinguistics is the study of language in relation to society.16. Modern linguistics is mostly prescriptive, but sometimes descriptive.17. Modern linguistics is different from traditional grammar.18. A diachronic study of language is the description of language at some point in time.19 Modern linguistics regards the written language as primary, not the written language.20. The distinction between competence and performance was proposed by F. de Saussure.II. Fill in each of the following blanks with one word which begins with the letter given:21. Chomsky defines ― competence‖ as the ideal user's k__________ of the rules of his language./doc/4215996376.html,ngue refers to the a__________ linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community while the parole is the concrete use of the conventions and application of the rules. 23.D_________ is one of the design features of human language which refers to the phenomenon that language consists of two levels: a lower level of meaningless individual sounds and a higher level of meaningful units./doc/4215996376.html,nguage is a system of a_________ vocal symbols used for human communication.25. The discipline that studies the rules governing the formation of words into permissible sentences in languages is called s________.26. Human capacity for language has a g ____ basis, but the details of language have to be taught and learned.27. P ____ refers to the realization of langue in actual use.28. Findings in linguistic studies can often be applied to the settlement of some practical problems. The study of such applications is generally known as a________ linguistics./doc/4215996376.html,nguage is p___________ in that it makes possible the construction and interpretation of new signals by its users. In other words, they can produce and understand an infinitely large number of sentences which they have never heard before.30. Linguistics is generally defined as the s ____ study of language.III. There are four choices following each statement. Mark the choice that can best complete the statement.31. If a linguistic study describes and analyzes the language people actually use, it is said to be ______________.A. prescriptiveB. analyticC. descriptiveD. linguistic32.Which of the following is not a design feature of human language?A. ArbitrarinessB. DisplacementC. DualityD. Meaningfulness33. Modern linguistics regards the written language as ____________.A. primaryB. correctC. secondary34. In modern linguistics, speech is regarded as more basic than writing, because ___________.A. in linguistic evolution, speech is prior to writingB. speech plays a greater role than writing in terms of the amount of information conveyed.C. speech is always the way in which every native speaker acquires his mother tongueD. All of the above35. A historical study of language is a ____ study of language.A. synchronicB. diachronicC. prescriptiveD. comparative36.Saussure took a (n)__________ view of language, while Chomsky looks at language from a ________ point of view.A. sociological…psychologicalB. psychological…sociologicalC. applied… pragmaticD.semantic and linguistic37. According to F. de Saussure, ____ refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community.A. paroleB. performanceC. langueD. Language38. Language is said to be arbitrary because there is no logical connection between _________ and meanings.A. senseC. objectsD. ideas39. Language can be used to refer to contexts removed from the immediate situations of the speaker. This feature is called_________,A. displacementB. dualityC. flexibilityD. cultural transmission40. The details of any language system is passed on from one generation to the next through ____ , rather than by instinct.A. learningB. teachingC. booksD. both A and BChapter 2 PhonologyLanguage is primarily vocal. The primary medium of human language is sound. Linguists are not interested in all sounds, but in speech sounds----sounds that convey meaning in human communication.Phonetics----A branch of linguistics which studies the characteristics of speech sounds and provides methods for their description, classification and transcription, e.g. [p] bilabial, stop.Three branches of phoneticsArticulatory phonetics----from the speakers‘ point of view, ―how speakers produce speech sounds‖the production of speech sounds. It is of our major concernAuditory phonetics----from the hearers‘ point ofview, ―how sounds are perceived‖the perceptive mechanism of speech soundsAcoustic phonetics----from the physical way or means by which sounds are transmitted from one to another.the physical properties of speech soundsThe speech organsWhere does the air stream come from?From the lungWhat is the function of vocal cords?Controlling the air streamWhat are the three cavities?Pharyngeal cavity ---- the throat;The oral cavity ---- the mouth;Nasal cavity ---- the nose.Transcription of speech soundsA standardized and internationally accepted system of phonetic transcription is the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The basic principle of the IPA is using one letter to represent one speech sound.The IPA attempts to represent each sound of human speech with a single symbol and the symbols are enclosed in brackets [ ] to distinguish phonetic transcriptions from the spelling system of a language.In more detailed transcription (narrow transcription) a sound may be transcribed with a symbol to which a smaller is added in order to mark the finer distinctions.Broad transcription ---- used in dictionary and textbook for general purpose, without diacritics, e.g. ], [ pit ] ?clear [ Narrow transcription ---- used by phonetician for careful study, with diacritics, e.g. dark [ l ], aspirated [ p ]Some major articulatory variables ---- dimensions on which speech sounds may vary:V oicing---- voiced & voiceless (Two consonants sharing the same place and manner of articulation become a pair, which is distinguished by voiceless or voiced. )Nasality ---- nasal & non-nasalAspiration ----- aspirated & unaspiratedClassification of English speech sounds---- English speech sounds are generally classified into two large categories: Vowels and ConsonantsNote: The essential difference between these two classes is that in the production of the former the airstream meets with no obstruction of any kind in the throat, the nose or the mouth, while in that of the latter it is somehow obstructed.Classification of consonants---- English consonants may be classified according to two dimensions:The manner of articulationThe place of articulationThe manner of articulationstops/plosives: [p],? , [t], [d], [k], [g];],?], [v], [s], [z], [? fricatives: [? ], [h];?], [?], [?[];??], [?? affricates: [?liquids:? ];?[l](lateral), [];?], [?], [? nasals: [?].?glides/semivowels: [w], [The place of articulationbilabial: [p], ], [w];?, [], [v];?? labiodental: [ ?];?], [? dental: [alveolar: [t], [d], [s], [z], [n], [l],? [r];];??], [ ??], [??], [?], [? palatal: [?velar: [k],? ?];?[g], [glottal: [h].?The place of articulation1. Bilabial;2. Labiodental;3. Dental or interdental;4. Alveolar;5. Palatoalveolar;6. Palatal;7. Velar;8. Uvular;9. Glottal.The description of English consonants Page 20 (textbook)Classification of vowelsDifferent vowels are determined by the position of the tongue and the relative opening of the lips.The criteria of vowel description1. the part of the tongue that is raised---front, center or back2. the opening of the mouth----close, semi-close, semi-open, open3. the shape of the lips---rounded, unrounded4. the length of the sound---tense, lax (紧,松)Monophthongs or pure/single vowels?Diphthongs or gliding vowelsMonophthongs or pure/single vowels----According to which part of the tongue is held highest in the process of production, the vowels can be distinguished as: front? ?]?], [?], [?], [?], [?], [??vowels: [],?], [?? central vowels: [? ];?[].??], [?], [??], [?], [?? back vowels: [?According to the openness of the mouth].?], [??], [?], [?? Close: [?];??], [?Semi-close: [];?], [? Semi-open: [?],? Open: [? ];?], [??], [?], [?[According to the shape of the lips or the degree of lip rounding ];?], [??], [?], [?? rounded: [?].??], [?], [?], [??], [?], [?], [?], [?], [?], [??unrounded: [According to the length of the vowels],??], [?? long: [? ]??], [??], [??[],?], [?], [?], [?], [?], [?], [?], [? short: [? ].?[Diphthongs/gliding vowels?],??], [??], [?? [? ].??], [??], [??], [??], [??[Exercises: underline the words that begin with a sound as required.A bilabial consonant: mad sad bad cad pad? had ladA velar consonant: nod god cod pod rod?Labiodental consonant: rat fat sat mat chat vat patAn alveolar? consonant: nick lick sick tick kick quickA palato-alveolar? consonant: sip ship tip chip lip zipA dental consonant: lie buy? thigh thy tie ryeA glide: one war yolk rush?Underline the words that end with a sound as required:A fricative?pay horse tough rice breath push sing wreathe hang cave messageA nasal?train bang leaf limbA stop?drill pipe fit crab fog ride laugh rack through tipAn affricate: rack such ridge booze?Underline the words that contain the sound as required:A central vowel:?mad lot but boot wordA front vowel:?reed pad load fate bit bed cookA rounded vowel:?who he bus her hit true boss bar walkA back vowel:?paid reap fool top good fatherDescribe the underlined consonants according to three dimensions:vd/vl place mannerLetterBrotherSunnyHopperItchingLodgerCallingSingingRobberEitherPhonologyPhonology studies the patterning of speech sounds, that is, the ways in which speech sounds form systems and patterns in human languages.Phonology and phonetics are two studies different inperspectives, which are concerned with the study of speech sounds.Phonology focuses on three fundamental questions.What sounds make up the list of sounds that can distinguish meaning in a particular language? What sounds vary in what ways in what context?What sounds can appear together in a sequence in a particular language?Phonetics & phonologyBoth are concerned with the same aspect of language----the speech sounds. But they differ in their approach and focus.Phonetics is of general nature; it is interested in all the speech sounds used in all human languages; it aims to answer questions like: how they are produced, how they differ from each other, what phonetic features they have, how they can be classified, etc.Phonology aims to discover how speech sounds in a language form patterns and how these sounds are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication.Phone, phoneme, allophonePhone: the different versions of the abstract unit – phoneme Phoneme: the mean-distinguishing sound in a language, placed in slash marksAllophone: a set of phones, all of which are versions of one phonemePhoneA phone---- a phonetic unit or segment. The? speech sounds we hear and produce during linguistic communication are all phones. Phones do not necessarily distinguish meaning, some do, some don‘t, e.g. t ]??[ b & t]?t ], [sp?[ b & t].?[spPhonemeA? phoneme---- is a phonological unit; it is a unit of distinctive value; an abstract unit, not a particular sound, but it is represented by a certain phone in certain phonetic context, e.g. the phoneme /p/ can be represented differently t].?p] and [sp?t], [t?in [pAllophoneAllophones ---- the phones? that can represent a phoneme in different phonetic environments.Phonemic contrast, complementary distribution and minimal pair.Phonemic? contrast----different or distinctive phonemes are in phonemic contrast, e.g. t].?t ] and [p? /b/ and /p/ in [ b Complementary? distribution----allophones of the same phoneme are in complementary distribution. They do not distinguish meaning. They occur in different phonetic contexts, e.g.dark [l] & clear [l], aspirated [p] & unaspirated [p].Minimal pairMinimal pair----when two different forms? are identical (the same) in every way except for one sound segment which occurs in the same place in the strings, the two sound combinations are said to form a minimal pair, e.g.beat, bit, bet, bat, boot, but, bait, bite, boat.Some rules of phonologySequential rules?Assimilation ruleDeletion rule?Sequential rules ---- the rules that govern the combination of sound s in a particular language, e.g. in English, ―k b i I‖ might possibly form blik, klib, bilk, kilb.。
戴炜栋-语言学讲课笔记
Chapter 1:Introduction1.1 What is linguistics?1.1.1 DefinitionLinguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language. It tries to answer the basic questions◆What is language?◆How does language work?◆What do all languages have in common? (languageuniversal语言共同性)◆What range of variation(变体) is found amonglanguages? (dialect. Mandarin普通话,accent)◆What makes language change?◆To what extent are social class differencesreflected in language? (sociolinguistics社会语言学)◆How does a child acquire his mother tongue?(language acquisition 语言习得)1.1.2 The scope of linguistics(语言学研究的范围)branches●general linguistics(普通语言学)●phonetics(语音学)●phonology(音系学)●morphology(形态学)●syntax(句法学)●semantics(语义学)Example:boy: human male young animategirl: human female young animate componential analysis 语义成分分析●pragmatics(语用学)It is cold here.Please close the door.I want to put on more clothes.I don’t want to stay here.●sociolinguistics(社会语言学)●psycholinguistics (心理语言学)●applied linguistics(应用语言学)broad sense:广义,narrow sense:狭义=language teaching1.1.3 Some important distinctions in linguistics (语言学中一些重要的概念区分)1.1.3.1 Prescriptive vs. descriptive(规定与描写)If a linguistic study aims to describe and analyze the language people actually use, it is said to be descriptive;If the linguistic study aims to lay down(规定) rules for "correct and standard" behaviour in using language, i.e. to tell people what they should say and what they should not say, it is said to be prescriptive.1.1.3.2 Synchronic(共时语言学) vs. diachronic(历时语言学)●The description of a language at some point of timein history is a synchronic study.●The description of a language as it changes throughtime is a diachronic study. A diachronic study oflanguage is a historical study; it studies thehistorical development of language over a period oftime.1.1.3.3 Speech and writing(言语与文字)Speech and writing are the two major media of linguistic communication. Modern linguistics regards the spoken language as the natural or the primary medium of human language for some obvious reasons. From the point of view of linguistic evolution, speech is prior to writing. The writing system of any language is always "invented" by its users to record speech when the need arises. Even in today's world there are still many languages that can only be spoken but not written.1.1.3.4 Langue and parole(语言与言语)Langue refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community.(语言社区)Parole refers to the realization of langue in actual use. (actual use of language,concrete)Differences:1. Langue is abstract; it is not the language people actually use. Parole is concrete; it refers to the naturally occurring language events.(语言事件)2. Langue is relatively stable, it does not change frequently; while parole varies from person to person, and from situation to situation.(Saussure索绪尔)1.1.3.5 Competence and performance(语言能力和语言运用)competence and performance,Chomsky(乔姆斯基)(a prof. at MIT) defines competence(langue) as the ideal user's knowledge of the rules of his language,and performance (parole) the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication. While Saussure's distinction and Chomsky's are very similar, they differ at least in that Saussure took a sociological view of language and his notion of langue is a matter of social conventions, and Chomsky looks at language from a psychological point of view and to him competence isa property of the mind of each individual.1.1.3.6 Traditional grammar and modern linguistics(传统语法与现代语言学)《普通语言学教程》Saussure索绪尔The differences:Firstly, linguistics is descriptive while traditional grammar is prescriptive.Second, modern linguistics regards the spoken language as primary, not the written.Then, modern linguistics differs from traditional grammar also in that it does not force languages into a Latin-based framework of the languages used by mankind.1.2 What is language?1.2.1 Definitions of language◆"Language is a purely human and non-instinctivemethod of communicating ideas, emotions and desiresby means of voluntarily produced symbols." (Sapir,1921)◆Language is "the institution whereby humanscommunicate and interact with each other by means ofhabitually used oral-auditory arbitrary symbols."(Hall, 1968)◆"From now on I will consider language to be a set(finite or infinite) of sentences, each finite inlength and constructed out of a finite set ofelements." (Chomsky, 1957)◆Language is a system of arbitrary (任意的)vocalsymbols used for human communication.First of all, language is a system, i.e., elements of language are combined according to rules.Second, language is arbitrary(任意的) in the sense that there is no intrinsic (天生的,内在的)connection between a linguistic symbol and what the symbol stands for, for instance, between the word "pen" and the thing we write with.(This conventional nature of language is well illustrated by a famous quotation from Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet": "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.")Third, language is vocal because the primary medium for all languages is sound.The term "human" in the definition is meant to specify that language is human-specific, i.e., it is very different from the communication systems other forms of life possess, such as bird songs and bee dances.1.2.2 Design features(识别特征)1)Arbitrariness(任意性)2) Productivity(多产性)3) Duality(二重性)4) Displacement(移位)5) Cultural transmission(文化传递)Chapter 2: Phonology2.1 The phonic medium of language(语言的语音媒介)Speech and writing are the two media or substances used by natural languages as vehicles for communication. Manylanguages in the world today are both written and spoken. But statistics resulting from careful investigations show that there have been over 5,000 languages in the world, about two thirds of which have not had written form.Of the two media of language, speech is more basic than writing for reasons that were discussed in the last chapter. The writing system of any language is always "invented" by its users to record speech when the need arises.Language is first perceived through its sounds. Thus the study of sounds is of great importance in linguistics. Naturally, linguists are not interested in all sounds; they are concerned only with those sounds that are produced by humans through their speech organs and have a role to play in linguistic communication. These sounds are limited in number. This limited range of sounds which are meaningful in human communication constitute the phonic medium of language(语言的语音媒介); and the individual sounds within this range are the speech sounds (言语语音).2.2 Phonetics(语音学)2.2.1 What is phonetics?Phonetics is defined as the study of the phonic medium of language;it is concerned with all the sounds that occur in the world's languages.Phonetics looks at speech sounds from three distinct but related points of view.First, it studies the sounds from the speaker's point of view, i.e., how a speaker uses his speech organs to articulate the sounds. Then, it looks at the sounds from the hearer's point of view, i.e., how the sounds are perceived by the hearer. Lastly, it studies the way sounds travel by looking at the sound waves, the physical means by which sounds are transmitted through the air from one person to another. These three branches of phonetics are labelled articulatory phonetics(发音语音学), auditory phonetics(听觉语音学), and acoustic phonetics(声学语音学)respectively.Of the three branches of phonetics, articulatory phonetics has the longest history. However, some important facts have also been either discovered or confirmed by acoustic and auditory phonetics, especially by the former. Acoustic phoneticians try to describe the physical properties of the stream of sounds which a speaker issues. To describe these properties, they record the sound waves on machines called spectrographs(频谱仪). By studying the sound waves thus recorded, they have discovered that what might be heard as the same one utterance is only coincidentally, if ever, physically identical. The "same" sounds weclaim to have heard are in most cases only phonetically similar, but rarely phonetically identical. Phonetic similarity, not phonetic identity is the criterion with which we operate in the phonological analysis of languages.2.2.2 Organs of speech(发音器官)The articulatory apparatus of a human being are contained in three important areas: the pharyngeal cavity(咽腔)-- the throat, the oral cavity(口腔)- the mouth, and the nasal cavity(鼻腔)-- the nose. The air stream coming from the lungs may be modified in these cavities in various ways. It may also be modified in the larynx before it reaches any of the cavities. Such modification results from some kind of interference with the movement of the air stream. The principal source of such modifications is the tongue, and the word "language" itself derives from the Latin word "lingua", meaning the "tongue". The pharyngeal cavity Air coming from the lungs and through the windpipe passes through the glottis, a part of the larynx, which is a bony structure at the end of the windpipe. This is the first point where sound modification might occur. Lying across the glottis are the vocal cords. These two thin tissues can be held tightly together to cut off the stream of air, as when one is ' holding his breath'. They can be relaxed and folded back at each side to let airflow through freely and silently as in normal breathing. Then they may also be held together tautly so that the air stream vibrates them at different speeds when forcing its passage through them. Vibration of the vocal cords results in a quality of speech sounds called "voicing'', which is a feature of all vowels and some consonants in English. Such consonants are voiced. When the vocal cords are drawn wide apart, letting air go through without causing vibration, the sounds produced in such a condition are voiceless. The oral cavity The greatest source of modification of the air stream is found in the oral cavity. The speech organs located in this cavity are the tongue, the uvula, the soft palate (the velum), the hard palate, the teeth ridge (the alveolus), the teeth and the lips.Of all these, the tongue is the most flexible, and is responsible for more varieties of articulation than any other. Obstruction between the back of the tongue and the velar area results in the pronunciation of [k] and [g ]. The narrowing of space between the hard palate and the front of the tongue leads to the sound [j]. The obstruction created between the tip of the tongue and the alveolar ridge results in the sounds [t] and [d]. Partial obstruction between the upper front teeth and the tip of the tongue produces the sounds [θ] and [ð].1. lips唇2. teeth牙齿3. tooth ridge (alveolus)齿龈4. hard palate硬腭5. soft palate (velum) 软腭6. uvula7. tip of tongue8. blade of tongue9. back of tongue10. vocalcords11. pharyngeal cavity12. nasal cavityThe nasal cavityThe nasal cavity is connected with the oral cavity. The soft part of the roof of the mouth, the velum, can be drawn back to close the passage so that all air exiting from the lungs can only go through the mouth. The sounds produced in this condition are not nasalized , such as the vowels and most consonants in English. Then , the passage can also be left opento allow air (or part of it)to exit through the nose. In this case, the sounds pronounced are nasalized, such as the three nasal consonants in English [m], [n], and [η]. Generally, the passage is definitely open or closed. But in some styles of speaking or in some dialects, partial opening may be observed, and the result is speech with a nasal colouring or "twang".2.2.3 Orthographic representation of speech sounds --broad and narrow transcriptionsTowards the end of the nineteenth century, when articulatory phonetics had developed to such an extent in the West that scholars began to feel the need for a standardized and internationally accepted system of phonetic transcription. Thus the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) came into being. With minor modifications it is still widely used now. The basic principle of the IPA is using one letter selected from major European languages to represent one speech sound.As some speech sounds produced differ only in some detailed aspects, the IPA provides its users with another set of symbols called diacritics, which are added to the letter-symbols to bring out the finer distinctions than the letters alone may possibly do.Thus two ways to transcribe speech sounds are now available. One is the transcription with letter-symbols only and the other is thetranscription with letter-symbols together with the diacritics. The former is called broad transcription. This is the transcription normally used in dictionaries and teaching textbooks for general purposes. The latter, i. e. the transcription with diacritics, is called narrow transcription. This is the transcription needed and used by the phoneticians in their study of speech sounds. With the help of the diacritics they can faithfully represent as much of the fine details as it is necessary for their purpose.In broad transcription, the symbol [I] is used for the sound [1] in the four words leaf [l i:f], feel [fi:l], build [bild], and health [helθ]. As a matter of fact, the sound [1] in all these four sound combinations differ slightly. The [1] in [li:f ], occurring before a vowel, is called a clear [l], and no diacritic is needed to indicate it; the [1] in [fi:I] and [bild], occurring at the end of a word or before another consonant, is pronounced differently from the clear [1] as in "leaf". It is called dark and in narrow transcription the diacritic [~] is used to indicate it. Then in the sound combination [helθ], the sound [1] is followed by the English dental sound [θ], its pronunciation is somewhat affected by the dental sound that follows it. It is thus called a dental [1], and in narrow transcription the diacritic is used to indicate it. It is transcribed as [helθ].Another example is the consonant [p]. We all know that [p] is pronounced differently in the two words pit and spit. In the word pit, thesound [p] is pronounced with a strong puff of air, but in spit the puff of air is withheld to some extent. In the case of pit, the [p] sound is said to be aspirated and in the case of spit, the [p] sound is unaspirated. This difference is not shown in broad transcription, but in narrow transcription, a small raised "h" is used to show aspiration, thus pit is transcribed as [p h It] and spit is transcribed as [splt].2.2.4 Classification of English speech soundsAn initial classification will divide the speech sounds in English into two broad categories: vowels and consonants. Two definitions of vowels as a general phonetic category are quoted below:"V owels are modifications of the voice-sound that involve no closure, friction, or contact of the tongue or lips." (Bloomfield) "A vowel is defined as a voiced sound in forming which the air issues in a continuous stream through the pharynx and mouth, there being no audible friction." (Jones)The two definitions point to one important feature of vowels, i.e. in producing a vowel the air stream coming from the lungs meets with no obstruction whatsoever. This marks the essential difference between vowels and consonants. In the production of the latter category it is obstructed in one way or another.2.2.4.1 Classification of English consonantsEnglish consonants can be classified in two ways: one is in terms of manner of articulation and the other is in terms of place of articulation.In terms of manner of articulation the English consonants can be classified into the following types:stops: When the obstruction created by the speech organs is total or complete, the speech sound produced with the obstruction audibly released and the air passing out again is called a stop or a plosive. The English stops fall into three pairs: [p][b],[t][d],and [k][g].fricatives: When the obstruction is partial and the air is forced through a narrow passage in the mouth so as to cause definite local friction at the point, the speech sound thus produced is a fricative.affricates: When the obstruction, complete at first, is released slowly with the friction resulting from partial obstruction (as in fricatives), the sounds thus produced are affricates.liquids: When the airflow is obstructed but is allowed to escape through the passage between part or parts of the tongue (the tip or the sides ) and the roof of the mouth, the sounds thus produced are called liquids. The English liquids are [ I ] and [ r ]. [ 1 ] is called a lateral soundbecause in the production of it the surface of the tongue, instead of being more or less flat, is made slightly convex and causes stoppage in the centre of the roof of the mouth while allowing air to pass at the sides. In the production of the other liquid [r], the tip of the tongue is curled back and the air passes over it. It is also called "retroflex".nasals: When the nasal passage is opened by lowering the soft palate at the back of the mouth and air is allowed to pass through it, the sounds thus produced are called nasals. There are three nasals in English [m] [n] and [η].glides: Glides, sometimes called "semivowels", are a rather marginal category. The English glides are [w] and [j], both voiced. They are formed in the same manner as the vowels [u] and [I ], with a narrower passage between the lips or between the tongue and the hard palate to cause some slight noise from the local obstruction.In terms of place of articulation, the English consonants can be classified into the following types:bilabial: In the production of these sounds, the upper and the lower lips are brought together to create obstruction. The English bilabials are [p] [b] [m] [w].labiodental: In the production of these sounds, the lower lip isbrought into contact with the upper teeth, thus creating the obstruction. The labiodental sounds in English are [f] and [v].dental: The obstruction is created between the tip of the tongue and the upper teeth. There are two dental sounds in English; they are [θ] and [ð].alveolar: The tip of the tongue is brought into contact with the upper teeth-ridge to create the obstruction. The alveolar sounds are [t][d][s][z] [n][l][r].palatal: The obstruction is between the back of the tongue and the hard palate.velar: The back of the tongue is brought into contact with the velum, or the soft palate. The sounds thus produced in English are [k][g] and [η].glottal: The vocal cords are Drought momentarily together to create the obstruction. There is only one glottal sound in English, i.e.[h].The two classifications are combined in the table below, with the help of which we can adequately describe a consonant, or identify a consonant when given its phonetic features:2.2.4.2 Classification of English vowelsAs in the production of vowels the air stream meets with no obstruction, they cannot be classified in terms of manner of articulatioa:0r place of articulation as consonants. Other criteria have to be found for their classification. V owel sounds are differentiated by a number of factors: the position of the tongue in the mouth, the openness of the mouth, the shape of the lips, and the length of the vowels.V owels may be distinguished as front, central, and back according to which part of the tongue is held highest. A front vowel is one in the production of which the front part of the tongue main-tains the highest position; If it is the central part of the tongue that is held highest, the vowels thus produced are called central vowels. Then if we raise the 'back of the tongue higher than the rest of it.To further distinguish members of each group, we need to apply another criterion, i.e. the openness of the mouth. Accordingly, we classify the vowels into four groups: close vowels, semi-close vowels, semi-open vowels, and open vowels. The following diagram summarises our classification by applying the two criteria.A third criterion that is often used in the classification of vowels is the shape of the lips. In English, all the front vowels and the central vowels are unrounded vowels, i.e., without rounding the lips, and all the back vowels, with the exception of [a:], are rounded. It should be notedthat some front vowels can be pronounced with rounded lips.After applying the three criteria, we can now aptly describe some of the English vowels. For example, the vowel [e] can be described as front, semi-close, and unrounded. But the feature "unrounded" is usually omitted since all front vowels in English are unrounded.Then the English vowels can also be classified according to the length of the sound. Corresponding to the distinction of long and short vowels is the distinction of tense and lax vowels. The long vowels are all tense vowels and the short vowels are lax vowels. When we pronounce a long vowel, the larynx is in a state of tension, and in the pronunciation of a short vowel, no such tension occurs, the larynx is quite relaxed.So far we have been classifying the individual vowels, also known as monophthongs. In English there are also a number of diphthongs, which are produced by moving from one vowel position to another through intervening positions.2.3 Phonology2.3.1 Phonology and phoneticsBoth phonology and phonetics are concerned with the same aspect of language -- the speech sounds. But while both are related to thestudy of sounds, they differ in their approach and focus. As we have seen in the last section, phonetics is of a general nature; it is interested in all the speech sounds used in all human languages: how they are produced, how they differ from each other, what phonetic features they possess, how they can be classified, etc. Phonology, on the other hand, aims to discover how speech sounds in a language form patterns and how these sounds are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication.Now'let's take the [1] sound in English as an example and see how the same sound can be investigated from both the phonetic and the phonological point of view. As we know, the [1] sound in the two English words leap and peel is pronounced differently. The first one is what we call a clear [l] and the second one a dark .The difference between these two sounds is what the phoneticians are interested in. But phonologically these sounds are regarded to be two versions of the same one basic entity. From the phonological point of view, these two sounds are fundamentally the same, since they have one and the same function in communication, in distinguishing between words and meanings despite their difference in pronunciation. If someone should pronounce the dark in the word :"peel" incorrectly as a clear [l], an English speaker would not for this reason fail to Understand him, he would still understand what action he is talking about but would only find his pronunciationa little bit strange. The phonologists have found that the various versions of the [I] sound do notoccur at random in English; their distribution follows a nicely complementary pattern: we use clear [1] before a vowel, such as loaf, and dark at the end of a word after a vowel or before a consonant, such as tell, quilt. This is an important phonological conclusion. But phonology is concerned with the sound system of a particular language, so the conclusions we reach about the phonology of one language is very often language specific and should not be applied to another language without discretion. What is true in one language may not be true in another language.2.3.2 Phone, phoneme, and allophoneA phone is a phonetic unit or segment. The speech sounds we hear and produce during linguistic communication are all phones. When we hear the following words pronounced: pit, spit, tip, feel, leaf, the phones we have heard are [p h] (as in pit), [p] (as in spit), [p h](as in tip).But a phone does not necessarily distinguish meaning; some do, some don't. For example, [s] and [t] do , as [si:m] and [ti:m] are two words with totally different meanings, and [t h ] and [t ] don't, as [stDp] and [st h op] mean the same to a speaker of English. Again, we should remind ourselves that what does not distinguish meaning in one language may probably do in another language.A phoneme is a phonological unit; it is a unit that is of distinctive value. It is an abstract: unit. It is not any particular sound, but rather it is represented or realized by a certain phone in a certain phonetic context. For example, when we pronounce the two words peak and speak, we are aware that the sound [p] is pronounced differently. In the word peak, the [p] sound is pronounced with a strong puff of air stream; but the same stop sound is pronounced slightly differently in the word speak, the puff of air is withheld a little. The [p] sound in peak is called an aspirated [p], and the [p] sound in speak is an nnaspirated [p]. The relation between aspirated [p ] and unaspirated [p] corresponds to that between clear [1 ] and dark: there is a slight difference in the way they are pronounced, but such a difference does not give rise to difference in meaning. So /p/is a phoneme in the English sound system, and it can be realized differently as aspirated or unaspirated in different contexts. Conventionally phones are placed within square brackets, and phonemes in slashes. The different phones which can represent a phoneme in different phonetic environments are called the allophones of that phoneme. For example, the phoneme/1/in English can be realized as dark, clear [1] , etc. which are allophones of the phoneme /1/.Then, how a phoneme is represented by a phone, or which allophone is to be used, is determined by the phonetic context in which it occurs. But the choice of an allophone is not random or haphazard; it isrule-governed. One of the tasks of the phonologists is to find out these rules. The rule that governs the distribution of clear [1] and dark is an example.Although phonemes are the minimal segments of language systems, they are not their minimal elements. A phoneme is further analyzable because it consists of a set of simultaneous distinctive features. It is just because of its distinctive features that a phoneme is capable of distinguishing meaning. A native speaker of English can tell by intuition that the following sound combinations all carry different meanings: [ mæn ], [ pæn ], [ bæn ], [ tæm ], [ ræm ], [ kæn ], [ðæm]. This is because they all contain a different phoneme. The features that a phoneme possesses, making it different from other phonemes, are its distinctive features.2,3.3 Phonemic contrast, complementary distribution, and minimal pairIt can be easily observed that phonetically similar sounds might berelated in two ways. If they are two distinctive phonemes, they are said to form a phonemic contrast, e.g. /p/ and /b/ in [pit]and [bit ], [roup]and [roub]. If they are allophones of the same phoneme, then they do not distinguish meaning, but complement each other in distribution, i.e. they occur in different phonetic environments. For instance, the clear [1]。
叶蜚声语言学纲要全册复习知识点笔记(重点)
导言一、语言学的对象和学科性质(一)语言学的研究对象语言学是研究语言的科学,语言是语言学的研究对象.1.语言现象语言现象是人类社会普遍具有的现象,它是最早纳入人类研究视野的现象之一.(1)人类对于世界上的各种自然现象和社会现象的理性认识以及相关的许多抽象观念,是在各个古典文明形成的时期出现的.有关语言的理性思考也是从这一时期开始的.(2)中国先秦时期的思想家、古希腊的哲学家、古代印度的思想家等,都提出了对语言的一般看法,并且对后人产生了深远影响.这是对语言的最早的理性认识.2.语言学的发展过程(1)语言学的三大发源地在各个文明的发展过程中,古代文化典籍的传承成为文化发展延续的重要途径.这些政治、哲学、宗教、历史、文学等方面的经典著作要得到学习和继承,都需要语言方面的分析和解释.这样,在许多有着悠久历史文化传统的地区都出现了语文学研究,这是语言的系统研究的开始.中国、印度和希腊-罗马在传统语文学的研究上都取得了辉煌成就,是语言学的三大发源地.(2)语言学三大发源地的成就①中国传统语言研究a.先秦时期已经出现大量的文化典籍,它们所使用的古代书面语体被后人学习继承,称作文言文.直至 20世纪初,正式的书面语一直使用这种文言文的形式.b.中国传统的语言研究主要是围绕解读文言文典籍的需要进行的,主要是分析汉字的形体,探求它的古代读音和意义,形成了统称"小学"的文字、音韵、训诂之学,也就是中国传统的语文学.②古代印度语言研究a.在印度,文化经典主要是宗教典籍,所用的语言是古代的梵语.最初这些经典是靠口耳相传,后来由文字记载下来.b.古代印度的语言研究主要是对这些宗教经典的解读.古代印度的学者在对语言一般性质的认识以及具体的语音和语法研究等方面都有卓越建树,对世界其他地区的语言研究也产生了深远影响.③西欧语言研究a.古希腊有丰富的文化典籍,语文学非常发达,已经有了系统的语法研究成果. b.罗马人继承了古希腊的语言研究传统,形成了拉丁语的语法研究体系.c.西欧各国有一千多年时间在正式的场合都使用古典拉丁语,语言研究主要围绕拉丁语进行,语法、修辞、逻辑成为学校传授的主课,编出了种种语法、词典和读本,逐渐形成了传统的西方语言学.(二)语言学的学科性质1.语文学时期的语言研究不是独立的学科语文学时期的语言研究首先关注的是反映在古代书面文献中的古代思想观念、政治制度等等.语文学时期语言研究的直接目的是解读古典文献,而不是自觉地探索语言自身的规律.因此,语文学时期的语言研究还不是独立的学科.2.语言学成为一门独立学科的标志到 19 世纪,语言自身独有的发展规律被广泛地认识到,形成了历史比较语言学,这标志着语言学不再是其他学科的附庸,已经成为一门独立的学科.3.语言学作为一门现代科学的形成20 世纪初,瑞士语言学家索绪尔在《普通语言学教程》中提出,存在于语言社团中每个人头脑中的共同的语言形式结构是语言学研究的真正对象.这为形成系统的现代语言学理论体系奠定了基础,语言学从此成为一门现代科学.【名师点拨】对于这一部分内容,考生需从整体上认识语言学的历史发展脉络与性质特征. 4.语言需要从多角度、多方面进行研究语言系统大致可以分为语音、语法、语汇等几个子系统.(1)共时语言学的研究角度:描写语言每个子系统在某一个特定时期的共时状态和不同子系统之间的关联.(2)历时语言学的研究角度:研究语言每个子系统在不同时期所发生的变化及其变化中不同子系统之间的关联.(3)语言研究可以具体地研究某一个语言,也可以通过多语言的比较探求所有人类语言的语音、语法、语汇在共时结构上的共性,探求所有人类语言在历史发展中的共同规律.5.理论语言学及其任务(1)理论语言学,也称普通语言学,是关于语言的一般规律的理论研究.(2)理论语言学的任务是综合各种语言的研究成果,归纳成语言的一般规律.(3)理论语言学目前只是综合了一部分语言的研究成果,还有待于不断补充和修正.6.语言与人类自身以及社会环境存在着密切关联(1)语言学也探究语言系统与人、社会之间错综复杂的联系.(2)20 世纪下半叶出现了社会语言学、心理语言学、计算语言学等新的语言学分支,以及关于语言功能、的研究,语言认知基础的研究,逻辑和语义的关系的研究等.7.语言学是一项基础研究语言学是关于人类社会生活中的最基本现象的研究之一,语言学与数学、逻辑学、物理学、生命科学等基础学科一样,是一项基础研究.二、语言学在科学体系中的地位(一)语言研究的最根本问题运用语言进行交际的过程大体上可以分为"编码-发送-传递-接收-解码"五个阶段.在整个语言交际过程中, 语言学关心的核心是编码和解码的过程,它涉及对语言结构本体的研究,包含形式和内容.可以说,语言形式与内容的关系,是语言研究的最根本问题.(二)语言学研究的多学科性要真正把语言交际的过程认识清楚,需要各门学科的配合和协作.很多学科都从自己关心的角度来研究语言.这些学科研究的目的不完全在于语言自身,但这些研究对于全面认识和把握语言的各个侧面和各种特性是必需的, 有益于语言本体研究的深入.(三)语言研究和其他人文学科的密切关系1.在语言学成为独立学科前,语言研究就是哲学、逻辑学、文学或文献学的一部分,可见语言研究的成果对于这些学科的重要性,而这些领域曾是语言学最初产生的土壤,直接影响了最初语言研究的视角.2.当语言学成为独立学科后,这些传统的人文学科和语言学之间仍有着千丝万缕的联系,同时历史学、考古学、社会学、人类学等人文社会学科也在很大程度上受益于语言学的研究成果.(四)语言学和各时代的自然科学思潮的密切相关性1.19 世纪的历史比较语言学在语言观念和研究方法上都与生物学的进化论关系密切.2.20 世纪初的语言结构思想与科学的整体论思想息息相关.3.20 世纪下半叶,语言学和信息科学、认知科学、数理逻辑等学科表现出前所未有的密切关联,这些学科在研究取向、理论方法和阐释方式上都直接影响了语言学研究,这些学科的发展也亟待语言学的研究成果为其提供必要条件.(五)语言学是自然科学和人文社会科学联系的桥梁1.从语言现象的特征和语言学的发展历史看,语言学在科学体系中具有独特而重要的地位.可以说,语言学是自然科学和人文社会科学联系的桥梁.2.语言学在揭示语言的根本性质的过程中,需要不断借鉴融合其他学科的理论方法,不断开拓新的研究视角,提供新的具有创造性的理论,在加深认识语言现象的同时,也为其他学科的发展提供理论方法的参照.三、语言学的应用价值语言学的研究成果在人类社会生活中有着广泛而重要的应用价值. (一)语言学在继承传统文化和文字教学中的价值1.在历史上,语言研究曾为解读古代经典,继承传统文化提供了基本保证.2.语言文字教学是传统语言研究的重要应用领域.语言教学需要建立在对语言的理性认识之上,是语言研究成果最直接的应用.3.在文化交流中,不同语言之间的口语和书面语的翻译工作起着非常重要的作用,需要语言研究成果为其提供帮助.(二)语言学在科学发展中的重要作用语言学和其他学科间的密切关联体现出语言学在科学技术发展中的重要作用. 1.语言学的研究成果不仅在逻辑学、心理学等人文学科中起着重要作用,而且在神经生理学、信息科学等自然学科中也产生了重大影响,并促使形成了许多交叉学科,如社会语言学、神经语言学等. 2.有些学科本身就是应用学科,具有直接的应用价值,如病理语言学.(三)语言学研究成果为国家政府制定有关语言的政策法规提供参考和依据1.有关语言的一些政策法规成为国家政府规划政策的一部分,比如民族共同语的确定和规范,文字的规范等.2.国家语文政策的制定需要顺应语言自然的规律,语言学研究的成果为这些政策的正确制定提供参考和依据.3.在民族语文政策的制定、普通话的推广等工作中都需要语言学的研究成果,这也是语言学重要的社会需求.第 1 章语言的功能一、语言的社会功能(一)语言的信息传递功能1.信息传递功能语言的社会功能中最基本的是信息传递功能,这一功能体现在语言上就是内容的表达. 2.语言之外的其他信息传递形式(1)面部表情、手势、躯体姿态等非语言的形式,独自传递的信息有限,多半是辅助语言来传递信息;(2)文字是建立在语言基础之上的再编码形式;(3)旗语之类则是建立在语言或文字基础之上的再编码形式. 由此可知,语言是人类社会信息传递第一性的、最基本的手段.(二)语言的人际互动功能1.语言的社会功能的另一个重要方面是建立或保持某种社会关联,可称为语言的人际互动功能.互动包括两个方面:(1)说话者在话语中表达自己的情感、态度、意图;(2)这些又对受话者施加了影响,得到相应的语言或行动上的反馈,从而达到某种实际效果. 2.语言是说话者和听话者间交际互动的工具.二、语言的思维功能(一)语言和思维的关系1.思维功能是语言功能的另一重要方面语言是社会现象,是社会的交际工具,同时也是心理现象,是人类思维的工具. 2.无论是思维的形式、思维的过程还是思维的生理机制都和语言密切相关(1)从思维的形式上看语言是思维活动的动因和载体,是思维成果的贮存所.逻辑学把概念、判断和推理看作思维的基本形式.这些思维的基本形式都要依靠语言.概念表达要依托词语,判断和推理要在话语中实现.即使使用像数学符号那样的表达形式,也是以语言为基础的.(2)从思维的过程上看思维是知识的认知、获取和运用的过程,是一个信息加工的过程.客观的现实通过认知转化为主观化的信息必须有一套符号.人类使用的最基本最重要的符号是语言,语言符号帮助人达成对外界的认知,储存认知的成果, 并且发展人的认知能力.(3)从思维的生理机制上看大脑中有专门控制语言功能的区域,和人的抽象思维能力密切相关.目前新兴的认知神经语言学就是综合了语言学、认知心理学和神经生理学的成果,是专门探求语言、思维和大脑神经网络之间关系的一门交叉学科.(二)语言思维功能的生理基础1.大脑的左右分工人的大脑有左右两个半球,中间有"脑桥"(神经纤维)连接,使两个半球互相沟通.左半球管右半身的动作,右半球管左半身的动作.此外,大脑左半球控制着语言功能以及相关的计数、分类、推理等功能,掌管抽象的、概括的思维,而右半球则在艺术感知、面貌识别、立体图形识别、整体把握力与内在想象力等方面起着主要作用.2.大脑的其他具体功能分区人类大脑有躯体运动区、躯体感觉区、视区和听区,它们对称地存在于大脑的两个半球中.此外,大脑有人类特有的语言功能区:(1)说话中枢说话中枢,也称布洛卡区,在大脑左半球前部.这一区域受到损伤就会得失语症,丧失说话能力,但基本能听懂别人的话.(2)书写中枢书写中枢在大脑左半球前部,靠近布洛卡区.这一区域受伤的人,其他运动能力尚好,但失去写字、绘画等精细动作的能力,称作失写症.(3)视觉性语言中枢视觉性语言中枢在大脑左半球的后部,具有阅读理解功能.这一区域受损的人在视觉上并无障碍,但无法理解文字的意思,称作失读症.(4)听觉性语言中枢听觉性语言中枢在大脑左半球的后部,靠近视觉语言中枢.这一区域受损的人可以听到别人说话,但不能理解,同时自己表达也有问题,称为感觉性失语症.(三)儿童语言习得与思维的发展1.学话的过程实际上是认识世界、发展思维的过程(1)词汇的掌握和词汇量的发展方面.词汇的掌握既是语言掌握的重要方面,也是衡量儿童认知发展的重要指标.(2)语法掌握方面.语法的掌握分为三个阶段:独词句,双词句和实词句,进而掌握表示语言单位之间关系的虚词.这表明孩子在学习语言的道路上逐步摆脱事物具体形象的影响而愈来愈注意语言本身.2.儿童语言习得必须具备的条件(1)先天生理基础.其中最重要的就是大脑的结构和功能.(2)外界的社会条件.只有生活在正常的语言环境中,大脑的这种语言潜能才能得到开发.(3)儿童语言能力的开发还有时间的限制.最迟到十二三岁,如果在此之前没有机会学习语言,那么此后就不能像正常人那样自如地运用语言了.(四)关于聋哑人的语言和思维聋哑人也是能够思维的,原因有:1.聋哑人有健全的大脑和发音器官聋哑人和常人一样,生活在人类社会中,有健全的大脑和发音器官.他们主要是因为耳聋听不见别人说话, 才学不会语言.一旦恢复或获得了听觉,聋哑人也就可以逐渐学会说话.2.可以通过别的感觉器官传递信息大脑是人的一切活动的司令部,人的各种感觉器官由它统一指挥,组成一个完整的体系.聋哑人不能利用听觉符号传递信息表达思想,但可以通过别的感觉器官得到补偿.(五)思维能力的普遍性和思维方式的特殊性1.思维能力的普遍性思维是大脑的功能.人类大脑的生理构造都是一样的,没有民族性,因而大脑的功能--思维能力也没有民族性,全人类都一样.语言能力和思维能力是密切相关的,人类思维能力的普遍性与语言能力的普遍性是一致的. 语言的普遍性质也是语言的最根本的性质.2.思维方式的特殊性世界上有几千种语言,在不同的社会群体中使用,这些不同的语言既有共同性也有明显的差异性.思维的过程伴随着语言的运用,语言的差异会导致思维方式的差异.这种差异主要体现在以下两方面: (1)语言中的词汇反映出该语言社团对现实世界的概念分类.不同的语言反映出不同民族的语言社团对现实世界的概念分类有很大不同.(2)思维方式的差异更多地体现在不同语言在表达思想时语法方面的不同特点.第 2 章语言是符号系统一、语言的符号性质(一)语言和说话1.语言的有限性和无限性说话的行为和说出的话都属于语言现象,语言现象是无穷尽的.但无限的句子中包含着有限的东西:不同的句子中所包含的词是有限的.同一个词可以和不同的词组合,构成不同的句子.更重要的是,组织这些材料的规则是极其有限的.语言学所研究的"语言",正是指由有限的材料和有限的规则组成的系统,而不是指具体的话语. 2.语言和说话的区别说出来的一句一句的话和说话时所用的词与规则是两回事.(1)说话的行为和说出的话语总是具体的,在发音、词语选择、句子形式的运用等方面都有个人的特点. 而每个人说话或听话时使用的材料和规则却是具有一般性的,是社会每个成员共有的.(2)语言是能够生成话语的符号系统,而具体说出来的话语则是人们运用语言系统所产生的结果.(3)每个人说话都是自由的,但说话时选择什么材料,遵循什么规则是不自由的,必须服从社会的习惯. 所以,语言又是社会的规约,对每个语言使用者都具有强制性.【名师点拨】考生须准确掌握语言和说话的关系,结合实例识记语言和说话内容.说话和语言的区分是历年考研真题中的常考知识点.(二)语言与符号1.符号的含义符号是指用来表示某种意义的标记,包含形式和意义两个方面.形式是人们的感官可以感知的,而这些可以感知的形式都具有专门的意义,因此这些形式就具有了符号的功能.(1)符号的形式和意义是不可分离的,二者的结合才构成符号,没有无意义的符号形式.(2)符号的形式和意义都是一般性的.(3)符号的形式和意义之间没有本质上的、自然属性上的必然联系.2.语言符号的性质(1)语言符号的第一性的形式是人类发出的声音,用声音作为语言符号形式的物质载体,有其自然属性的优势.(2)语言符号的意义是对它所指代的一类心理现实的概括.这首先涉及心理现实与客观现实的关系,其次涉及语言符号意义的概括性.①客观现实是四维时空中外在于人的所有存在:当下和历史上所有的人物、事物、现象以及它们的相互关系及其变化.心理现实则是客观现实经过人的认知贮存在人的大脑中的各种知识信息.②符号的意义是认识活动的成果,代表一个一般的概念.所以,语言符号的意义是一般的、概括的东西.这一般的、概括的东西既能指任何具体的个体,也能指概括程度不同的类.二、语言符号的系统性(一)语言符号的任意性和线条性1.语言符号的任意性语言符号的任意性是指作为符号系统的成员,单个语言符号的语音形式和意义之间没有自然属性上的必然联系,只有社会约定的关系. 语言符号的任意性表现在以下几方面:(1)不同的语言用什么样的语音表达什么样的意义各不相同;(2)同一个语言,在不同的历史时期语音形式和意义的联系也是会变化的;(3)就单个的语言符号而言,其形式和意义的关联,在很大程度受制于它所从属的符号系统,取决于它在系统中的位置.语言符号的语音形式和意义范畴都不是孤立的,都是和符号系统的其他形式和意义相关联的.从这个意义上讲,强调语言符号的任意性,也是强调语言符号的系统性.2.语言符号的线条性语言符号的线条性是指语言符号在使用中是以符号序列的形式出现,符号只能一个跟着一个依次出现,在时间的线条上绵延,不能在空间的面上铺开.语言符号的线条性有以下作用:(1)语言符号的线条性使人们要表达的复杂的意义都要通过符号序列的形式体现.在语言使用中,不仅要了解单个符号的音义关系,还要了解符号序列中符号之间的关系以及单个符号和符号序列整体的关系,这样才能达到完整意义的表达或理解的目的.(2)结构关系的不同是由符号的线性排序不同来表达的,语言结构规则就隐含在这些线性序列中.所以, 线条性是语言符号系统分析的基础.(二)语言符号的层级体系1.语言符号的层级体系语言符号系统是一种分层装置,这种装置靠组合和替换来运转. 2.语言的分层情况语言装置最重要的特点就是分层和不同层面上分为大大小小不同的单位. (1)单位大小的不同.句子是由若干单个符号构成的.符号之间的结构关系常常是小的符号先构成了更大些的结构单位,大的结构单位还可以构成更大的单位,如此类推,最后构成句子.(2)语言系统分为音系和语法两个层面.在这两个层面上都有最小单位和小单位组成大单位的多级组织结构,这是语言系统最重要的特点,即语言系统的两层性.3.语言系统两层性的特点语言系统两层性的一大特点是形式层的最小单位一定大大少于符号层的最小单位.(三)组合关系和聚合关系语言系统中每个符号都处在既可以和别的符号组合,又可以被别的符号替换这样两种关系当中. 1.组合关系符号和符号组合起来,形成高一级结构.处于高一级结构中的各个符号,称为结构的成分.结构中各个成分的关系称为组合关系.也就是说,组合关系是同一性质的结构单位按线性次序根据构造规律组合起来形成的关系, 即符号与符号组合起来的关系.成分一旦组织为结构,就不再仅仅是个体,还增加了彼此之间的组合关系,增加了属于结构整体的意义.例如,"红"和"花"可组合成"红花"和"花红".顺序不同,组合起来的关系就不同, 意义也不一样.2.聚合关系聚合关系是指在一定的组合结构中,如果一些语言单位在某一环节上可以相互替换而不改变结构关系,那么这些符号在结构中具有某种相同的作用,它们自然地聚合成群,它们之间的关系称作聚合关系.例如,在"红花" 这个符号结构中,能出现在"红"这个位置上的有"白、黄、蓝……",能出现在"花"这个位置上的有"光、线、脸蛋……",这两组词各自构成一个聚合.组合关系和聚合关系是语言系统中的两种根本关系.不但语言符号(词、语素)处在这两种关系之中,而且构成符号的音位和意义也都处在这两种关系之中.【名师点拨】语言的符号性质和基本特征是本章中的重点,也是常考点.考生须熟记符号的基本构成和属性, 理解符号系统性,重点掌握语言系统的层级装置以及组合聚合两种关系在语言运用中的地位.这部分内容理论性较强,可适当结合例证透彻理解.三、语言符号系统是人类特有的(一)人类语言符号和其他动物"语言"的根本区别人类语言符号和其他动物的交际方式如叫喊、舞蹈等,有本质的区别,主要体现在以下几个方面: 1.任意性任意性是符号最重要的特征.动物"语言"中一定程度的任意性都局限于一个题目,是僵硬的,不能与人类语言符号的任意性同日而语.没有任意性或任意性程度很低,都说明其符号性很弱.2.单位的明晰性人类说出来的话是有界限清晰的单位的.而动物的"语言",其表现无论是借助声音还是形体,总体上都是不可分的,是以囫囵一团的叫喊或舞蹈动作来表示某一固定的意思,分析不出单位,也谈不上单位的组装.3.结构的二层性人类语言是一种两层的结构装置:音系层和符号层.符号层又分若干个级,它以语素为最小单位,经过排列组合构成符号的序列:词、句子.这个分层装置依次以少数有规则地组成多数,几十个音位排列组合成几千个语素的语音外壳,使意义具有人们可以感知的形式;几千个语素排列组合成几万以至几十万个词,乃至无数的句子. 相反,动物的"语言"不能分解成单位,谈不上有结构,更不用说有。
语言学概论经典复习笔记(全)
第一章.语言学的对象和任务1. 什么是语言功能角度的定义语言是人类最重要的交际和交流思想的工具。
信息论角度的定义语言是信息的载体和传播信息的媒介。
认知科学角度的定义语言是认知的工具汉语名词性偏正结构的表达顺序:用偏正结构表达两个物体的空间关系,采用“参照物——目的物”的认知顺序是汉语的一种优势语序。
这是汉语名词性偏正结构的表达原则,反映了汉语“由大到小”的表达习惯。
2. 什么是语言学定义语言学是研究语言规律的科学,使人们懂得关于语言的理性知识语言的起源A. .“神授说”基督教<圣经>关于人类语言起源的传说: <圣经>解释: 上帝谴责人类罪过和妄行的结果.B.“摹声说”。
古希腊哲学家柏拉图Plato早在公元前5世纪就提出了这种理论。
他认为,名称不过是它所表示的事物的声音的模拟。
这是一种朴素的唯物主义观点,它把语言的起源归结为客观世界的产物。
十八世纪德国的赫德尔发展了这一观点。
他认为,在原始社会,人们为了表达想要表达的各种动物对象,模仿那种动物的发声,比如拟声词。
C.“感叹说”。
古希腊哲学家伊壁鸠鲁(Epicurus, 公元前341~前270年)是其代表人物这种理论认为,原始人的感情冲动、受到惊恐后发出的喊叫等,也就是出于内心和外来的感受而发出的声音逐渐发展为感叹词,最终形成了语言。
D.“号子说”。
19世纪的法国哲学家努阿尔认为,原始人在集体劳动时会发出“咳哟”、“啊哈”等声音,以协调劳动的一致性,大致相当于今天的劳动号子,这就形成语言最初的成分——动词。
E.“劳动说”。
恩格斯首先提出来的。
恩格斯认为:一方面“劳动的发展必然促使社会成员更紧密地互相结合起来因为它使互相帮助和共同协作的场合增多了,并且使每个人都清楚地意识到这种共同协作的好处。
另一方面,劳动还使人的发音器官和大脑发达起来。
这些都是语言诞生的必要条件。
3语文学A 定义:为注解古代经典(如政治、哲学、历史、文学等经典作品),而对其中的文字\词汇\语法所作的研究.语文学是经学的附庸,没有把语言作为独立的学科研究. 又叫“前语言学”.印度宗教经典梵语:语音、语法研究西欧(希腊-罗马)古典拉丁文:语法、修辞、逻辑中国先秦典籍:汉字形音义研究三个重要的传统古印度巴尼尼<梵语语法>古希腊-罗马底奥尼修<希腊语法> 瓦罗《论拉丁语》中国“小学”中国第一部语法专著马建忠《马氏文通》(1898)采用的也是拉丁语的体系。
语言学教程课堂笔记
语言学教程课堂笔记第一章导论一、性质、对象、任务语言学的性质:既古老又年轻的学科,介于自然科学与社会科学之间的学科。
语言学的研究对象:人类自然语言语言学的任务:⑴“描写—解释”层次。
从宏观、微观两个方面描写和解释语言现象、语言的结构规律和应用方式。
使人们懂得关于语言的理性知识。
宏观上:把语言作为一个整体对象来研究,研究它的起源、发展、本质、功能,它和思维、意识的关系等等。
微观上:对语言内部结构进行研究,研究语言内部的结构规律,各要素的关系及发展、演变等。
⑵“认知—思维”层次。
探索人类语言符号行为的奥秘,语言是怎样组织意义的,语言是怎样划分世界从而把现实符号化的,人是怎样在思维和交际中运用语言符号的,语言和心灵的关系是怎样的,语言和文化的关系是怎样的。
⑶“技术—实用层次。
积极地为计算机对语言文字进行信息处理等工程技术服务,为言语矫治等语言病理的治疗工作服务,或者为语言教学、外语教学等服务。
二、语言学的分类⑴根据研究性质、范畴和对象,可分为理论语言学和应用语言学A、理论语言学:是语言学的主体,是研究语言的功能和结构的一般理论。
B、应用语言学:研究语言应用的一切学科,包括语言教学、机器翻译、失语症治疗、语言规划。
⑵从研究对象的范围上分,语言学可分为具体语言学和普通语言学。
三、语言学发展简史⑴传统语言学【语文学(语言文字学)】时期1、时间与特征:一般讲19世纪历史比较语言学产生以前的时期称为“传统语言学时期”、“古典语文学时期”。
这一时期,语言研究处于附庸地位。
还没有发展为独立的学科。
主要是为经典作注解。
2、传统语言学的三大发源地:古希腊—罗马、古印度和古代中国3、传统语言学的作用⑵索绪尔语言学理论1、区分语言(language)和言语(parole)语言:从言语中概括出来为社会公认的词语和规则的总和。
言语:个人说或写的行为和结果2、区别组合关系和聚合关系3、语言和言语的关系:A、一般和个别B、抽象和具体四、语言学的功能(为什么要学语言学概论)1、便与从事与语言相关的工作2、有利于语言规划、信息处理等语言应用3、便于观察语言现象、发现并解释语言规律4、便于提高发现、分析与解决问题的能力5、在语言理论的指导下,透过语言使用我们可以洞悉人类心理的奥秘,为更好地掌握和利用心智打下基础五、怎样学习语言学概论1、勤观察,培养对语言现象的敏锐洞察力2、多思考,培养强烈的问题求解意识3、三个充分:观察充分、描写充分、解释充分第二章语言的本质与起源一、语言的本质(什么是语言?)1、①(为什么)语言是人类特有的、②(为什么是)最重要的全民交际工具。
胡壮麟《语言学教程》笔记第5-6章
Chapter 5 Meaning1. Semantics(语义学)Semantics is the study of meaning of the linguistic units, words and sentences in particular. (语义学是对语言单位,尤其是词和句子的意义的研究。
)2. Meanings of “meaning”1). Meaning:Meaning refers to what a language expresses about the world we live in or any possible or imaginary world.(意义是指语言所表达的关于现实世界或者想象中的世界的想法。
)2). Connotation: (内涵)Connotation means the properties of the entity a word denotes.(内涵指的是一个词所指称的实体的特征。
)3). Denotation: (外延)Denotation involves the relationship between a linguistic unit and the non-linguistic entity to which it refers. Thus it is equivalent to referential meaning. (外延涉及语言单位与非语言实体之间的关系。
在这个意义上,它跟指称意义是一样的。
)3. The difference between meaning, concept, connotation, and denotationMeaning refers to the association of language symbols with the real world. There are many types of meaning according to different approaches.Concept is the impression of objects in people’s mind.Connotation is the implied meaning, similar to implication.Denotation, like sense, is not directly related with objects, but makes the abstract assumption ofthe real world.4. The referential theory1). DefinitionThe theory of meaning which relates the meaning of a word to the thing it refers to, or stands for, is known as the referential theory.(把词语意义跟它所指称或代表的事物联系起来的理论,叫做指称理论)2). The semantic triangle (语义三角)Ogden and Richards presented the classic “Semantic Triangle”as manifested in the following diagram。
语言学笔记大全
语言学笔记大全第一章语言的社会功能一、什么是语言?什么是说话?语言是音义结合的符号系统,人类最重要的交际工具和思维工具。
说话是人们运用语言工具跟人们交流思想的行为。
二、语言和说话的关系要弄清楚“什么是语言”的问题,首先要弄清楚的是,语言和说话不是一回事。
语言不等于说话,也不等于说出来的话。
说话是运用语言跟人们交流思想的行为,本身不等于语言。
但是,另一方面,语言的存在又必须以说话为前提,一个人如果长期生活在孤岛上,没有说话的需要,不跟人交谈,他就会失去语言能力。
如刘连仁的例子(课本37页)。
这件事告诉我们语言与说话的联系与区别:语言好象是一种工具,需要人去用,不用就会“生锈”,就会“退化”。
而说话则是人们运用语言工具跟人们交流思想的行为,说出来的话是这种行为“生产”出来的“产品”,是为了适应他人的需要而存在的,没有这种需要,人们就会丧失说话的语言能力,这就是等于说:语言不等于说话,也不等于说出来的话。
那么,什么是语言?它在哪儿?回答是:语言存在于说话之中,人们可以从所说的话中找出语言来。
三、语言的作用是什么?语言是人类社会的交际工具。
每个社会,无论它是经济发达的社会,还是经济十分落后的社会,都必须有自己的语言,都离不开语言这个交际工具,语言是组成社会必不可少的一个因素,是人类与动物相区别的重要特征之一。
语言是联系社会成员的桥梁和纽带,没有语言,人类无法交际,人与人之间的联系就会中断,社会就会崩溃,不复存在。
四、什么是社会?什么是交际工具?所谓社会,就是指生活在同一个共同的地域中、说同一种语言、有共同的风俗习惯和文化传统的人类共同体,既一般所说的部落、部族和民族。
交际工具是指人们用来交流思想,进行交际的工具。
五、为什么说语言是人类最重要的交际工具?人们在进行社会交际的时候,除了运用语言传递信息外,也可以借助其他手段传递信息,表达思想。
比如运动场上,篮球教练用手势表示谁犯规、谁发球等内容,不用语言;部队用长短不同的号声表示起床、集合、冲锋、撤退等信息;在海上,船与船之间用旗语传递信息等等。
语言学第一学期完整课堂笔记
1. IntroductionLinguisticsDefinitionLinguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language. It tries to answer the basic questions “What is language?” and “How does language work?”ScopeGeneral linguistics: phonetics(音韵学), phonology(语音学), morphology(形态学), syntax(语法学), semantics(语义学), pragmatics(语用学), sociolinguistics(社会语言学),psycholinguistics(心理语言学),applied linguistics(应用语言学) DistinctionsPrescriptive/ descriptive(规定式、描述式)Descriptive----aims to describe and analyze the language people actually usePrescriptive----aims to lay down rules for “correct and standard” behavior in using language(Modern linguistics is mostly descriptive.)Synchronic/ diachronic(共识、历史)The description of a language at some period of time in history is a synchronic study. The description of a language as it changes through time is a diachronic study.In modern linguistics a synchronic approach seems to enjoy priority over a diachronic one.Speech/writing(spoken language/written language)Speech and written are two major media of linguistic communication. Modern linguistics regards the spoken language as the natural or the primary medium of human language for some obvious reasons.Speech is always the way in which every native speaker acquires his mother tongue, and writing is learned and taught when he goes to school.Competence and performance(规则、表现)Competence is the ideal user’s knowledge of the rules of his language, and performance the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication. What is language?Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication. Design featuresDesign features refer to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication..1)Arbitrariness任意性2)Productivity 多产性3)Duality 双重性4)Displacement 移位性5)Cultural transmission 文化传递性2. Phonology(音韵学\ 音系学)Phonetics(语音学)DefinitionPhonetics is defined as the study of the phonic phonic medium of language; it is concerned with all the sounds that occur in the world’s languages.Three branchesarticulatory phonetics(发音~) auditory phonetics(听觉~) acoustic phonetics (声学~)OrgansThree important areas:The pharyngeal cavity---the throatThe oral cavity---the mouthThe nasal cavity---the noseBroad/narrow transcription=====International phonetic alphabet (IPA)Classification of English consonantsIn terms of manner of articulation:Stops (爆破音) /p/ /b/ /t/ /d/ /k/ /g/Fricatives (摩擦音) /f/ /v/ /θ/ /ð/ /s/ /z/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /h/Affricates (破擦音) /tʃ/ /dʒ/Nasals (鼻音) /m/ /n/ /ŋ/Liquids (流音) /l/ /r/Glides (滑音、半元音) /w/ /j/In terms of place of articulation:Bilabial (双唇音) /p/ /b/ /m/ /w/Labio-dental (唇齿音) /f/ /v/Dental (齿音) /θ/ /ð/Alveolar (齿槽音) /t/ /d/ /s/ /z/ /tʃ/ /dʒ/ /n/ /l/ /r/Palatal (硬腭音) /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /tʃ/ /dʒ/Velar (软腭音) /k/ /g/ /ŋ/Glottal (喉音) /h/Classification of English vowelsClose vowels /i:/ /i/ /u:/ /u/Semi-close vowels /e/ /ə:/Semi-open vowels /ə/ /ɔ:/Open vowels /æ/ /ʌ/ /a:/ /ɔ/PhonologyPhonology and phoneticsBoth phonology and phonetics are concerned with the same aspect of language ----the speech sounds.Phonetics is of a general nature; it is interested in all the speech sounds used in all human language.Phonology , aims to discover how speech sounds in a language from patterns and how these sounds are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication.Phonemic contrast/complementary distributionPhonetically, similar sounds might be related in two ways. If they are distinctive phonemes, they are said to form a phonemic contrast.If they are allophones of the same phoneme, then they do not distinguish meaning, but complement each other in distribution.Minimal pair(最小对主体)Some rules in phonologySequential rules 序列原则Assimilation rule 同化原则Deletion rule 省略原则Suprasegmental features超音段音位特征的表现形式有:Stress tone intonation(语用)3. Morphology(词素-最小构词单位)Morpheme:Smallest meaningful unitFree morpheme/wordSmallest meaningful unit which can be used freelyFree morphemegrammatical morpheme 语法词素Morpheme inflectional morpheme 有词尾变化的词素--------- Or ----------Bond morpheme lexical morpheme 词汇词素Derivational morpheme 派生词素构词法1.派生法affination: prefix + root/ root + suffix/ prefix + root +suffix2.合成法compounding3.此类转化conversion4.混词blending : motel/ brunch5.截短法clipping initialism BBC VOA6.缩略词AcronymAcronyms: NATO7.类比法analogy8.逆成,去缀back-formation:editor---edit9.重复reduplication10.专有名词普通化4. SyntaxDefinitionSyntax is a branch of linguistics that studies how words are combined to form sentences and the rules that govern the formation of sentences.Word-level categoriesMajor lexical categoriesNoun (N) verb(V) adjective(A) preposition(P)Minor lexical categoriesDeterminer (Det) Degree word (Deg) Qualifier (Qual) Auxiliary (Aux)Conjunction (Con)To determine a word’s category, three criteria are usually employed, namely meaning, inflection and distribution.Phrase categories and their structuresNoun phrase (NP) verb phrase (VP)Adjective phrase (AP) prepositional phrase (pp)NP VP AP PP------phrase level····N V A P-------word levelPhrase structure ruleNP---(Det) PPVP---(Qual) V (NP)AP---(Deg) A (PP)PP---(Deg) P (NP)XP ruleXPSpecifier X(head) Complement X—theoryXP (phrase level)X—Specifier X(head) Complemen Phrase elementsSpecifiers Complements----CP ModifiersThe expanded XP rule(Spec(Det)(Mod))X(Com*(Mod))Sentences (the S rule)The S rule: S----NP VPSNP VPNPDet N V Det NA boy found the evidenceInflP(=S)NP Infl VPInfl realized by a tense labelInflp(=S)NP VPNPDet N Infl V DetPstA boy found the book Transformations1.auxiliary movementinversion (revised)Move Infl to CCPV 2.CPC SNP Infl VPInflN Vfly3.Wh MovementWh Movement (revised):Move a WH phrase to the specifier position under CPCPC SNP NP Infl VPN Pst NPV N Who e won the game5 Semantics (语义学)DefinitionThe study of meaningThe conceptualist viewThis view holds that there is no direct link between a linguistic form and what it refers to; rather, in the interpretation of meaning they are linked through the mediation of concepts in the mind. This is best illustrated by the classic semantic triangle or triangle of significance.Thought/ ReferenceSymbol/Form Referent ContextualismMeaning should be studied in terms of situation, use, context----elements closely linked with language behaviour.“We shall know a word by the company it keeps, and that by regarding words as acts, events, habits, we limit our fellows.”Two kinds of context are recognized: the situational context (情境语境) and the linguistic context(语言语境).。
普通语言学教程笔记(索绪尔)
《普通语言学教程》索绪尔绪论第一章语言学史一瞥语法(规范)-语文学(过于注重书面语)-比较语文学或比较语法(只比较)-新语法学派(语言集团集体精神的产物)第二章语言学的材料和任务;与毗邻科学的关系语言学的任务是:a 对一切能够得到的语言进行描写并整理他们的历史,尽可能重建每个语系的母语;b 寻求在一切语言中永恒地普遍地起作用的力量,整理出能概况一切历史特殊现象的一般规律;c 确定自己的界限和定义。
它与社会心理学、生理学、语文学相关。
语言学也有实际用途,特别是对于那些利用文献的人,另外对一般修养也很重要。
第三章语言学的对象定义——在任何时候,语言都是现行制度和过去的产物。
我们的研究方法是一开始就站在语言的阵地上,把它当做言语活动的其他一切表现的准则。
语言和言语活动不能混为一谈,它只是言语活动的一个确定的部分,而且当然是一个主要部分,它既是言语机能的社会产物,又是社会集团为了使个人有可能行使这机能所采用的一整套必不可少的规约。
语言本身是一个整体,一个分类的原则。
它是一种约定俗成的东西,人们同意使用什么符号,这符号的性质是无关轻重的。
对人类天赋的不是口头的言语活动,而是构成语言——即一套和不同的观念相当的不同的符号——的机能。
人们说话的机能——不管是天赋的或非天赋的——只有借助于集体所创造和提供的工具才能运用,所以,说语言使言语活动成为统一体,绝不是空想。
语言在言语活动事实中的地位——言语循环重建:心理现象-生理过程-物理过程-生理过程-心理现象(c-i)这一主动过程称为执行部分,(i-c)这一被动过程称为接受部分,此外还有联合和配置的机能。
语言是社会的、主要的,言语是个人的、偶然的、从属的。
语言的特征是:1 他是言语活动事实的混杂的总体中的一个十分确定的对象,是言语的社会部分。
2 语言是人们能够分出来加以研究的对象。
3 言语是异质的,而规定下来的语言是同质的,它是一种符号系统,在系统中,只有意义和音响形象的结合是主要的,符号的两个部分都是心理的。
英语语言学笔记清华大学
英语语言学笔记清华大学英语语言学笔记(1)一、绪论语言学的定义语言学的研究范畴几对基本概念语言的定义语言的甄别特征What is linguistics? 什么是语言学?Linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language. It studies not any particular language, but languages in general. 语言学是对语言科学地进行研究的学科。
语言学所要研究的不是某一种特定的语言,而是人类所有语言的特性。
The scope of linguistics 语言学研究的范畴Phonetics语音学\Phonology音系学\Morphology形态学\Syntax句法学\Semantics语义学\Pragmatics语用学\Sociolinguistics社会语言学\Psycholinguistics心理语言学\Applied linguistics应用语言学Prescriptive vs. descriptive 规定性与描述性Descriptive:a linguistic study describes and analyzes the language people actually use.Prescriptive: it aims lay down rules for "correct" behavior.Modern linguistics is descriptive; its investigations are based on authentic, and mainly spoken data.Traditional grammar is prescriptive; it is based on "high" written languageSynchronic vs. diachronic 共时性与历史性The description of a language at some point in time is a synchronic studyThe description of a language as it changes through time isa diachronic studyIn modern linguistics, synchronic study seems to enjoy priority over diachronic study.Speech and writing 口头语与书面语Speech enjoys priority over writing in modern linguistics study for the following reasons:(1) speech precedes writing in terms of evolution(2)a large amount of communication is carried out in speech tan in writing(3) speech is the form in which infants acquire their native languageLanguage and parole 语言与言语Language refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech communityParole refers to the realization of language in actual useCompetence and performance 能力与运用Chomsky defines competence as the ideal users' knowledge of the rules of his languagePerformance: the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communicationWhat is language? 什么是语言?Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communicationCharacteristics of language: 语言的特性Language is a rule-governed systemLanguage is basically vocalLanguage is arbitrary (the fact different languages have different words for the same object is a good illustration of the arbitrary nature of language. This conventional nature of language is well illustrated by a famous quotation fromShakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet": "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.")Language is used for human communicationDesign features of language 语言的甄别特征American linguist Charles Hockett specified 12 design features:1) arbitrariness 武断性2) productivity 创造性3) duality 二重性4) displacement移位性5) cultural transmission 文化传递性英语语言学笔记(2)二、音系学语言的声音媒介什么是语音学发音器官音标……宽式和严式标音法英语语音的分类音系学和语音学语音、音位、音位变体音位对立、互补分部、最小对立几条音系规则超切分特征Two major media of communication: speech and writingThe limited range of sounds which are meaningful in human communication and are of interest to linguistic studies are the phonic medium of language. 用于人类语言交际的声音称为语音,这些数目有限的一组语音构成了语言的声音媒介。
语言学笔记
英语考研语言学重难点提示1. What is language?“Language is system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication. It is a system, since linguistic elements are arranged systematically, rather than randomly. Arbitrary, in the sense that there is usua lly no intrinsic connection between a work (like ―book‖) and the object it refers to. This explains and is explained by the fact that different languages have different ―books‖: ―book‖ in English, ―livre‖ in French, ―shu‖ in Chinese. It is symbolic, becaus e words are associated with objects, actions, ideas etc. by nothing but convention. Namely, people use the sounds or vocal forms to symbolize what they wish to refer to. It is vocal, because sound or speech is the primary medium for all human languages. Writing systems came much later than the spoken forms. The fact that small children learn and can only learn to speak (and listen) before they write (and read) also indicates that language is primarily vocal, rather than written. The term ―human‖ in the definition is meant to specify that language is human specific.2. What are design features of language?“Design features‖ here refer to the defining properties of human language that tell the difference between human language and any system of animal communication. They are arbitrariness, duality, productivity, displacement, cultural transmission and interchangeability3. What is arbitrariness?By ―arbitrariness‖, we mean there is no logical connection between meanings and sounds. A dog might be a pig if only the first person or group of persons had used it for a pig. Language is therefore largely arbitrary. But language is not absolutely seem to be some sound-meaning association, if we think of echo words, like ―bang‖, ―crash‖, ―roar‖, which are motivated in a certain sense. Secondly, some compounds (words compounded to be one word) are not entirely arbitrary either. ―Type‖ and ―write‖ are opaque or unmotivated words, while ―type-writer‖ is less so, or more transparent or motivated than the words that make it. So we can say ―arbitrariness‖ is a matter of degree.4. What is duality?Linguists refer ―duality‖ (of structure) to the fact that in all languages so far investigated, one finds two levels of structure or patterning. At the first, higher level, language is analyzed in terms of combinations of meaningful units (such as morphemes, words etc.); at the second, lower level, it is seen as a sequence of segments which lack any meaning in themselves, but which combine to form units of meaning. According to Hu Zhanglin et al., language is a system of two sets of structures, one of sounds and the other of meaning. This is important for the workings of language.A small number of semantic units (words), and these units of meaning can be arranged and rearranged into an infinite number of sentences (note that we have dictionaries of words, but no dictionary of sentences!). Duality makes it possible for a person to talk about anything within his knowledge. No animal communication system enjoys this duality.5. What is productivity?Productivity refers to the ability to the ability to construct and understand an indefinitely large number of sentences in one‘s native language, including those that has never heard before, but that are appropriate to the speaking situation. No one has ever said or heard ―A red-eyed elephant is dancing on the small hotel bed with an African gibbon‖, but he can say it when necessary, and hecan understand it in right register. Different from artistic creativity, though, productivity never goes outside the language, thus also called ―rule-bound creativity‖ (by N.Chomsky).6. What is displacement?“Displacement‖, as one of the design features of the human language, refers to the fact that one can talk about things that are not present, as easily as he does things present. In other words, one can refer to real and unreal things, things of the past, of the present, of the future. Language itself can be talked about too. When a man, for example, is crying to a woman, about something, it might be something that had occurred, or something that is occurring, or something that is to occur. When a dog is barking, however, you can decide it is barking for something or at someone that exists now and there. It couldn‘t be bo w-wowing sorrowfully for a bone to be lost. The bee‘s system, nonetheless, has a small share of ―displacement‖, but it is an unspeakable tiny share.7. What is cultural transmission?This means that language is not biologically transmitted from generation to generation, but that the details of the linguistic system must be learned anew by each speaker. It is true that the capacity for language in human beings (N. Chomsky called it ―language acquisition device‖, or LAD) has a genetic basis, but the particular language a person learns to speak is a cultural one other than a genetic one like the dog‘s barking system. If a human being is brought up in isolation he cannot acquire language. The Wolf Child reared by the pack of wolves turned out to speak the wolf‘s roaring ―tongue‖ when he was saved. He learned thereafter, with no small difficulty, the ABC of a certain human language.8. What is interchangeability?Interchangeability means that any human being can be both a producer and a receiver of messages. Though some people suggest that there is sex differentiation in the actual language use, in other words, men and women may say different things, yet in principle there is no sound, or word or sentence that a man can utter and a woman cannot, or vice versa. On the other hand, a person can be the speaker while the other person is the listener and as the turn moves on to the listener, he can be the speaker and the first speaker is to listen. It is turn-taking that makes social communication possible and acceptable. Some male birds, however, utter some calls which females do not (or cannot). When a dog barks, all the neighboring dogs bark. Then people around can hardly tell which dog (dogs) is (are) ―speaking‖ and which listening.9. Why do linguists say language is human specific?First of all, human language has six ―design features‖ which animal communication systems do not have, at least not in the true sense of them. Secondly, linguists have done a lot trying to teach animals such as chimpanzees to speak a human language but have achieved nothing inspiring. Washoe, a female chimpanzee, was brought up like a human child by Beatnice and Alan Gardner. She was taught ―American sign Language‖, and learned a little that made the teachers happy but did mot make the linguistics circle happy, for few believed in teaching chimpanzees. Thirdly, a human child reared among animals cannot speak a human language, not even when he is taken back and taught to do so.10. What functions does language have?Language has at least seven functions: phatic, directive, Informative, interrogative, expressive, evocative and performative. According to Wang Gang (1988,p.11), language has three main functions: a tool of communication, a tool whereby people learn about the world, and a tool by which people learn about the world, and a tool by which people create art . M .A. K. Halliday,representative of the London school, recognizes three ―Macro-Functions‖: ideational, interpersonal and textual.11. What is the phatic function?The ―phatic function‖ refers to language being used for setting up a certain atmosphere or maintaining social contacts(rather than for exchanging information or ideas). Greetings, farewells, and comments on the weather in English and on clothing in Chinese all serve this function. Much of the phatic language (e.g. ―How are you?‖ ―Fine, thanks.‖) is insincere if taken literally, but it is important. If you don't say ―Hello‖ to a friend you meet, or if you don‘t answer his ―Hi‖, you ruin your friendship.12. What is the directive function?The ―directive function‖ means that language may be used to get the hearer to do something. Most imperative sentences perform this function, e. g., ―Tell me the result when you finish.‖ Other syntact ic structures or sentences of other sorts can, according to J. Austin and J. Searle‘s ―Indirect speech act theory‖ at least, serve the purpose of direction too, e.g., ―If I were you, I would have blushed to the bottom of my ears!‖13. What is the informative function?Language serves an ―informational function‖ when used to tell something, characterized by the use of declarative sentences. Informative statements are often labelled as true (truth) or false (falsehood). According to P. Grice‘s ―Cooperative Principle‖, one ought not to violate the ―Maxim of Quality‖, when he is informing at all.14. What is the interrogative function?When language is used to obtain information, it serves an ―interrogative function‖. This includes all questions th at expect replies, statements, imperatives etc., according to the ―indirect speech act theory‖, may have this function as well, e.g., ―I‘d like to know you better.‖ This may bring forth a lot of personal information. Note that rhetorical questions make an exception, since they demand no answer, at least not the reader‘s/listener‘s answer.15. What is the expressive function?The ―expressive function‖ is the use of language to reveal something about the feelings or attitudes of the speaker. Subconscio us emotional ejaculations are good examples, like ―Good heavens!‖ ―My God!‖ Sentences like ―I‘m sorry about the delay‖ can serve as good examples too, though in a subtle way. While language is used for the informative function to pass judgment on the truth or falsehood of statements, language used for the expressive function evaluates, appraises or asserts the speaker‘s own attitudes.16. What is the evocative function?The ―evocative function‖ is the use of language to create certain feelings in the hearer. Its aim is , for example, to amuse, startle, antagonize, soothe, worry or please. Jokes(not practical jokes, though) are supposed to amuse or entertain the listener; advertising to urge customers to purchase certain commodities; propaganda to influence public opinion. Obviously, the expressive and the evocative functions often go together, i.e., you may express, for example, your personal feelings about a political issue but end up by evoking the same feeling in, or imposing it on, your listener. T hat‘s also the case with the other way round.17. What is the performative function?This means people speak to ―do things‖ or perform actions. On certain occasions the utterance itself as an action is more important than what words or sounds constitute the uttered sentence.The judge‘s imprisonment sentence, the president‘s war or independence declaration, etc., are performatives.18. What is linguistics?“Linguistics‖ is the scientific study of language. It studies not just one language of a ny one society, but the language of all human beings. A linguist, though, does not have to know and use a large number of languages, but to investigate how each language is constructed. He is also concerned with how a language varies from dialect to dialect, from class to class, how it changes from century to century, how children acquire their mother tongue, and perhaps how a person learns or should learn a foreign language. In short, linguistics studies the general principles whereupon all human languages are constructed and operate as systems of communication in their societies or communities.19. What makes linguistics a science?Since linguistics is the scientific study of language, it ought to base itself upon the systematic, investigation of language data which aims at discovering the true nature of language and its underlying system. To make sense of the data, a linguist usually has conceived some hypotheses about the language structure, to be checked against the observed or observable facts. In order to make his analysis scientific, a linguist is usually guided by four principles: exhaustiveness, consistency, and objectivity. Exhaustiveness means he should gather all the materials relevant to the study and give them an adequate explanation, in spite of the complicatedness. He is to leave no linguistic ―stone‖ unturned. Consistency means there should be no contradiction between different parts of the total statement. Economy means a linguist should pursue brevity in the analysis when it is possible. Objectivity implies that since some people may be subjective in the study, a linguist should be (or sound at least) objective, matter-of-face, faithful to reality, so that his work constitutes part of the linguistics research.20. What are the major branches of linguistics?The study of language as a whole is often called general linguistics. But a linguist sometimes is able to deal with only one aspect of language at a time, thus the arise of various branches: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, applied linguistics, psycholinguistics etc.21. What are synchronic and diachronic studies?The description of a language at some point of time (as if it stopped developing) is a synchrony study (synchrony). The description of a language as it changes through time is a diachronic study (diachronic). An essay entitled ―On the Use of THE‖, for example, may be synchronic, if the author does not recall the past of THE, and it may also be diachronic if he claims to cover a large range or period of time wherein THE has undergone tremendous alteration.22. What is speech and what is writing?No one needs the repetition of the general principle of linguistic analysis, namely, the primacy of speech over writing. Speech is primary, because it existed long long before writing systems came into being. Genetically children learn to speak before learning to write. Secondly, written forms just represent in this way or that the speech sounds: individual sounds, as in English and French as in Japanese. In contrast to speech, spoken form of language, writing as written codes, gives language new scope and use that speech does not have. Firstly, messages can be carried through space so that people can write to each other. Secondly, messages can be carried through time thereby, so that people of our time can be carried through time thereby, so that people of our timecan read Beowulf, Samuel Johnson, and Edgar A. Poe. Thirdly, oral messages are readily subject to distortion, either intentional or unintentional, while written messages allow and encourage repeated unalterable reading. Most modern linguistic analysis is focused on speech, different from grammarians of the last century and theretofore.23. What are the differences between the descriptive and the prescriptive approaches?A linguistic study is ―descriptive‖ if it only describes and analyses the facts of language, and ―prescriptive‖ if it tries to lay down rules for ―correct‖ language behavior. Linguistic studies before this century were largely prescriptive because many early grammars were largely prescriptive because many early grammars were based on ―high‖ (literary or religious) written records. Modern linguistics is mostly descriptive, however. It (the latter) believes that whatever occurs in natural speech (hesitation, incomplete utterance, misunderstanding, etc.) should be described in the analysis, and not be marked as incorrect, abnormal, corrupt, or lousy. These, with changes in vocabulary and structures, need to be explained also.24. What is the difference between langue and parole?F. de Saussure refers ―langue‖ to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community and refers ―parole‖ to the actual or actualize d language, or the realization of langue. Langue is abstract, parole specific to the speaking situation; langue not actually spoken by an individual, parole always a naturally occurring event; langue relatively stable and systematic, parole is a mass of confused facts, thus not suitable for systematic investigation. What a linguist ought to do, according to Saussure, is to abstract langue from instances of parole, i.e. to discover the regularities governing all instances of parole and make than the subject of linguistics. The langue-parole distinction is of great importance, which casts great influence on later linguists. 25. What is the difference between competence and performance?According to N. Chomsky, ―competence‖ is the ideal language user‘s k nowledge of the rules of his language, and ―performance‖ is the actual realization of this knowledge in utterances. The former enables a speaker to produce and understand an indefinite number of sentences and to recognize grammatical mistakes and ambiguiti es. A speaker‘s competence is stable while his performance is often influenced by psychological and social factors. So a speaker‘s performance does not always match or equal his supposed competence. Chomsky believes that linguists ought to study competence, rather than performance. In other words, they should discover what an ideal speaker knows of his native language. Chomsky‘s competence-performance distinction is not exactly the same as, though similar to, F. de Saussure‘s langue-parole distinction. Langue is a social product, and a set of conventions for a community, while competence is deemed as a property of the mind of each individual. Sussure looks at language more from a sociological or sociolinguistic point of view than N. Chomsky since the latter deals with his issues psychologically or psycholinguistically.26. What is linguistic potential? What is actual linguistic behaviour?These two terms, or the potential-behavior distinction, were made by M. A. K. Halliday in the 1960s, from a functional point of view. There is a wide range of things a speaker can do in his culture, and similarly there are many things he can say, for example, to many people, on many topics. What he actually says (i.e. his ―actual linguistic behavior‖) on a certain occa sion to a certain person is what he has chosen from many possible injustice items, each of which he could have said (linguistic potential).27. In what way do language, competence and linguistic potential agree? In what way dothey differ? And their counterparts?Langue, competence and linguistic potential have some similar features, but they are innately different. Langue is a social product, and a set of speaking conventions; competence is a property or attribute of each ideal speaker‘s mind; lingu istic potential is all the linguistic corpus or repertoire available from which the speaker chooses items for the actual utterance situation. In other words, langue is invisible but reliable abstract system. Competence means ―knowing‖, and linguistic poten tial a set of possibilities for ―doing‖ or ―performing actions‖. They are similar in that they all refer to the constant underlying the utterances that constitute what Saussure, Chomsky and Halliday respectively called parole, performance and actual linguistic behavior. Parole, performance and actual linguistic behavior enjoy more similarities than differences.28. What is phonetics?“Phonetics‖ is the science which studies the characteristics of human sound-making, especially those sounds used in speech, and provides methods for their description, classification and transcription, speech sounds may be studied in different ways, thus by three different branches of phonetics. (1) Articulatory phonetics; the branch of phonetics that examines the way in which a speech sound is produced to discover which vocal organs are involved and how they coordinate in the process. (2) Auditory phonetics, the branch of phonetic research from the hearer‘s point of view, looking into the impression which a speech sound makes on the hearer as mediated by the ear, the auditory nerve and the brain. (3) Acoustic phonetics: the study of the physical properties of speech sounds, as transmitted between mouth and ear. Most phoneticians, however, are interested in articulatory phonetics.29. How are the vocal organs formed?The vocal organs or speech organs, are organs of the human body whose secondary use is in the production of speech sounds. The vocal organs can be considered as consisting of three parts; the initiator of the air-stream, the producer of voice and the resonating cavities.30. What is place of articulation?It refers to the place in the mouth where, for example, the obstruction occurs, resulting in the utterance of a consonant. Whatever sound is pronounced, at least some vocal organs will get involved, e.g. lips, hard palate etc., so a consonant may be one of the ]; , following (1) bilabial: [p, b, m]; (2) labiodental: [f, v]; (3) dental:[ (4) alveolar:[t, d, l, n, s, z]; (5) retroflex; (6) palato-alveolar:[ ]; (7) palatal:[j]; (8) velar[ k, g]; (9) uvular; (10) glottal:[h]. Some sounds involve the simultaneous use of two places of articulation. For example, the English [w] has both an approximation of the two lips and that two lips and that of the tongue and the soft palate, and may be termed ―labial-velar‖.________________________________________31. What is the manner of articulation?The ―manner of articulation‖ literally means the way a sound is articulated. At a given place of articulation, the airstream may be obstructed in various ways, resulting in various manners of articulation, are the following: (1) plosive:[p, b, t, d, k, g]; (2) nasal:[m, n,]; (3) trill; (4) tap or flap;(5) lateral:[l]; (6) fricative:[f, v, s, z]; (7) approximant:[w, j]; (8) affricate:[ ].32. What is IPA? When did it come into being ?The IPA, abbreviation of ―International Phonetic Alphabet‖, is a compromise system making use of symbols of all sources, including diacritics indicating length, stress and intonation, indicating phonetic variation. Ever since it was developed in 1888, IPA has undergone a number of revisions.33. What is narrow transcription and what is broad transcription?In handbook of phonetics, Henry Sweet made a distinction b etween ―narrow‖ and ―broad‖ transcriptions, which he called ―Narrow Romic‖. The former was meant to symbolize all the possible speech sounds, including even the most minute shades of pronunciation while Broad Romic or transcription was intended to indicate only those sounds capable of distinguishing one word from another in a given language.34. What is phonology? What is difference between phonetics and phonology? “Phonology‖ is the study of sound systems- the invention of distinctive speech sounds that occur in a language and the patterns wherein they fall. Minimal pair, phonemes, allophones, free variation, complementary distribution, etc., are all to be investigated by a phonologist. Phonetics is the branch of linguistics studying the characteristics of speech sounds and provides methods for their description, classification and transcription. A phonetist is mainly interested in the physical properties of the speech sounds, whereas a phonologist studies what he believes are meaningful sounds related with their semantic features, morphological features, and the way they are conceived and printed in the depth of the mind phonological knowledge permits a speaker to produce sounds which from meaningful utterances, to recognize a foreign ―accent‖, to mak e up new words, to add the appropriate phonetic segments to from plurals and past tenses, to know what is and what is not a sound in one‘s language.35. What is a phone? What is a phoneme? What is an allophone?A ―phone‖ is a phonetic unit or segme nt. The speech sounds we hear and produce during linguistic communication are all phones. When we hear the following words pronounced: [pit], [tip], [spit], etc., the similar phones we have heard are [p] for one thing, and three different [p]s, readily mak ing possible the ―narrow transcription or diacritics‖. Phones may and may not distinguish meaning. A ―phoneme‖ is a phonological unit; it is a unit that is of distinctive value. As an abstract unit, a phoneme is not any particular sound, but rather it is represented or realized by a certain phone in a certain phonetic context. For example, the phoneme[p] is represented differently in [pit], [tip] and [spit]. The phones representing a phoneme are called its ―allophones‖, i.e., the different (i.e., phones) but do not make one word so phonetically different as to create a new word or a new meaning thereof. So the different [p] s in the above words are the allophones of the same phoneme [p]. How a phoneme is represented by a phone, or which allophone is to be used, is determined by the phonetic context in which it occurs. But the choice of an allophone is not random. In most cases it is rule-governed; these rules are to be found out by a phonologist.36. What are minimal pairs?When two different phonetic forms are identical in every way except for one sound segment which occurs in the same place in the string, the two forms (i. e., word) are supposed to form a ―minimal pair‖, e.g., ―pill‖ and ―bill‖, ―pill‖ and ―till‖, ―till‖ and ―dill‖, ―till‖ and ―kill‖, etc. All these words together constitute a minimal set. They are identical in form except for the initial consonants. There are many minimal pairs in English, which makes it relatively easy to know what are English phonemes. It is of great importance to find the minimal pairs when a phonologist is dealing with the sound system of an unknown language.37. What is free variation?If two sounds occurring in the same environment do not contrast; namely, if the substitution of one for the other does not generate a new word form but merely a different pronunciation of the same word, the two sounds then are said to be in ―free variation”. The plosives, for example, may not beexploded when they occur before another plosive or a nasal (e. g., act, apt, good morning). The minute distinctions may, if necessary, be transcribed in diacritics. These unexploded and exploded plosives are in free variation. Sounds in free variation should be assigned to the same phoneme. 38. What is complementary distribution?When two sounds never occur in the same environment, they are in ―complementary distribution‖. For example, the aspirated English plosives never occur after [s], and the unsaturated ones never occur initially. Sounds in complementary distribution may be assigned to the same phoneme. The allophones of [l], for example, are also in complementary distribution. The clear [l] occurs only before a vowel, the voiceless equivalent of [l] occurs only after a voiceless consonant, such as in the words ―please‖, ―butler‖, ―clear‖, etc., and the dark [l] occurs only after a vowel or as a syllabic sound after a consonant, such as in the words ―feel‖, ―help‖, ―middle‖, etc.39. What is the assimilation rule? What is the deletion rule?The ―assimilation rule‖ assimilates one segment to another by ―copying‖ a feature of a sequential phoneme, thus making the two phones more similar. This rule accounts for the raring pronunciation of the nasal [n] that occurs within a word. The rule is that within a word the nasal consonant[n] assumes the same place of articulation as the following consonant. The negative prefix ―in-― serves as a good example. It may be pronounced as [in], [i] or [im] when occurring in different phonetic contexts: e. g., indiscrete-[ ] (alveolar) inconceivable-[ ](velar) input-[‗imput] (bilabial)The ―deletion rule‖ tells us when a sound is to be deleted although is orthographically represented. While the letter ―g‖ is mute in ―sign‖, ―design‖ and ―paradigm‖, it is pronounced in their corresponding derivatives: ―signature‖, ―designation‖ and ―paradigmatic‖. The rule then can be stated as: delete a [g] when it occurs before a final nasal consonant. This accounts for some of the seeming irregularities of the English spelling.40. What is suprasegmental phonology? What are suprasegmental features? “Suprasegmental phonology‖ refers to the study of phonological properties of linguistic units larger than the segment called phoneme, such as syllable, length and pitch, stress, intonation. 41. What is morphology?“Morphology‖ is the branch of grammar that studies the internal structure of words, and the rules by which words are formed. It is generally divided into two fields: inflectional morphology and lexical/derivational morphology.42. What is inflection/inflexion?“Inflection‖ is the manifestation of grammatical relationships through the addition of inflectional affixes, such as number, person, finiteness, aspect, and case, which does not change the grammatical class of the items to which they are attached.43. What is a morpheme? What is an allomorph?The ―morpheme‖ is the smallest unit in terms of relationship between expression and content, a unit which cannot be divided without destroying or drastically altering the meaning, whether it is lexical or grammatical. The word ―boxes‖, for example, has two morphemes: ―box‖ and ―-es‖, neither of which permits further division or analysis if we don‘t wish to sacrifice meaning. Therefore a morpheme is considered the minimal unit of meaning. Allomorphs, like allophones vs. phones, are the alternate shapes (and thus phonetic forms) of the same morphemes. Some morphemes, though, have no more than one invariable form in all contexts, such as ―dog‖, ―cat‖, etc. The variants of the plurality ―-s‖ make the allomorphs thereof in the following examples:。
语言学课堂笔记
语言学课堂笔记(英汉对照)第一章Chapter 1 Invitations to LinguisticsTeaching aims: let the students have the general idea about language and linguistics.Teaching difficulties: design features of language ; some important distinctions in linguistics Teaching procedures1. language1.1 Why study language?为什么学习语言A tool for communication交流的工具An integral part of our life and humanity 人类生活和人性中不可或缺的一部分.If we are not fully aware of the nature and mechanism of our language, we will be ignorant of what constitutes our essential humanity.如果不能完全理解语言的本质和结构,我们就会对人类的本质一无所知.1.2 What is language?什么是语言1.2.1 different senses of language 语言的不同意义1. what a person says( concrete act of speech)a person‟s consistent way of speaking or writinga particular level of speaking or writing e.g. colloquial languagean abstract system2. A webster‟s New Dictionrary offers a frequently used sense of the word “language”:a. human speech 人类的言语b. the ability to communicate by this means 通过言语来交流的能力c. a system of vocal sounds and combinations of such sounds to which meaning is attributed, used for the expression or communication of thoughts and feelings; 用来表达或交流思想和感觉的一套声音及这些声音互相结合的系统d. the written representation of such a system 系统的文字表达3. the barest of definition, language is a means of verbal communication.最简洁的定义:语言是言语交流的一种方式.Language is instrumental in that communicating by speaking or writing is a purposeful act. It is social and conventional in that language is a social semiostic and communication can only take place effectively if all the users share a broad understanding of human interaction including such associated factors as nonverbal cues, motivation, and socio-cultural roles. Language distinguishes us from animals.因为说和写的交流方式是一种有目的的行为,所以语言是实用性的;因为语言是社会符号,语言的交流只能在所有参与者广泛理解了人类的那些非言语的暗示,动机,社会文化角色等等互相关联的因素之后才能有效进行,因此语言又是社会的,约定俗成的.语言使人类区别于动物.1.2.2 definitions一.Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.What is communication?A process in which information is transmitted from a source (sender or speaker) to a goal (receiver or listener).A system----since elements in it are arranged according to certain rules systematically, rather than randomly. They cannot be arranged at will. e.g. He the table cleaned. (×) bkli (×)Why do we say language is arbitrary?Arbitrary----there is no intrinsic (logic) connection between a linguistic form and its meaning, between the sounds that people use and the objects to which these sounds refer. This explains and is explained by the fact that different language have different words for the same object, it is good illustration of the arbitrary nature of language . it is only our tacit agreement of utterance and concept at work and not any innate relationship bound up in the utterance. A typical example to illustrate the arbitrary of language is a famous quotation from shakepeare’s play:”Romeo and Juliet: A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.一朵玫瑰不管它叫什么名字,闻起来都是一样香的.Symbols----words are just the symbols associated with objects, actions, and ideas by nothing but convention. Namely, people use the sounds or voval forms to symbolize what they wish to refer to.V ocal-------- the primary medium for all languages is sound, no matter how well developed their writing systems are. Writing systems came much later than the spoken forms. The fact that small children learn and can only learn to speak and listen before they write or read also indicates that language is primarily vocal, rather than written.Writing systems came into being much later than the spoken forms.People with little or no literacy can also be competent language users.Human ----language is human-specific.Human beings have different kinds of brains and vocal capacity.“Language Acquisition Device”(LAD)二.What characteristics of langauge do you think should be included in a good ,comprenhensive definition of language?Language is a rule-governed system; langauge is basically vocal; langauge is arbitrary ; langague is used for human communication.1.3 Design features of language 语言的结构特征Design features------ refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication. They are arbitrariness, duality, creativity/ productivity, displacement, clutural transmission and interchangeability.Design features----- are features that define our human languages,such as arbitrariness,duality,creativity,displacement,cultural transmission,etc.(指决定了人类语言性质的特征.例如任意性,二重性,创造性,移位性,文化转移性等.)The American linguist Charles Hockett specified twelve design features.What is arbitrariness?任意性a. arbitrariness---- arbitrariness(任意性): one design feature of human language,which refers to the fact that the forms of linguistic signs bear no natural relationship to their meaning.(人类语言的本质特征之一,指语言符号的形式与意义之间没有自然的联系.)It was discussed by Saussure first.The link between them is a matter of convention.E.g. “house” uchi (Japanese)Mansion (French)房子(Chinese)(1) arbitrary between the sound of a morpheme and its meaning语言的音和义之间的任意性a. By “arbitrary”, we mean there is no logical connection between meanings and sounds. 语言的意义和语音之间没有逻辑关系。
胡壮麟《语言学教程》笔记第10-11章
Chapter 10 Language and Computer1. 计算机语言学计算机语言学可以看作是应用语言学的分支,即通过计算机处理人类语言。
计算机语言包括:对语言数据的分析,建立一个序列,通过它,语言学习者可以获得各种语法规律或某一特定词项的出现频率;人工语言的电子生成和人类语言的自动识别;它也包括不同自然语言之间的自动翻译和语篇处理;人与计算机的交流。
2. CAI, CAL & CALL2.1. CAI:计算机辅助教学,就是在教学过程中使用计算机。
2.2. CAL:计算机辅助学习,强调在教和学两方面使用计算机,通过学生自己的推理和和实践,帮助学习者达到教学目标。
2.3. CALL:计算机辅助语言学习,如果说CAI,和CAL是处理一般的教和学,那么CALL是用来处理语言教学的。
它特别是指将计算机运用到第二语言或外语的教学中去。
3. 机器翻译&人工翻译3.1. 定义机器翻译是指使用机器将语篇从一种自然语言翻译至另一种自然语言。
机器翻译可分为两类:不需要辅助的和需要辅助的。
3.2. 机器翻译&人工翻译在新世纪之初,很明显,机器翻译和人工翻译能够且将会相对协调地同时存在。
我们仍旧需要那些人工翻译者所作出的贡献。
当翻译不得不讲究“可发行”质量时,机器翻译和人工翻译都具有各自的作用。
对语篇翻译来说,在对输出的质量要求不高的地方,机器翻译是一种理想的解决方法。
对信息的一对一交换而言,人工翻译家可能总是会有作用的。
至于口语翻译,一定会是人工翻译者的市场。
4. 计算机语料库4.1. 语料库(corpus)A collection of linguistic data, either compiled as written texts or as a transcription of recorded speech. The main purpose of a corpus is to verify a hypothesis about language--- for example, to determine how the application of a particular sound, word, or syntactic construction varies.语料库是一个语言数据的集合,可以有书面文本构成,也可以由录音言语的转写本构成。
语言学笔记(上课的笔记)
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION(高叔叔说这章要考50分,所以东西有点多~)1.Linguistics1.1Definition: linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.Three key words:♦Language:preceded by the zero article implies not any particular language but language in general.♦Study: investigate examine research♦Scientific:observation →generalization→hypotheses formation→data collection→hypotheses testing→ theory formulation How to make a study "scientific"?1) Exhaustiveness: gather all the materialsrelevant to one's investigation and give theman adequate explanation.2) Consistency: make no contradiction between parts of the total statement3) Economy: other things being equal, simpler shorter analysis is better.4) Objectivity: be as objective as possible in describing and analyzing the data, allowing no prejudice to influence one’s generalization.1.2 the scope of linguisticsGeneral linguistics: the study of language as a whole. This deals with the basic concepts, theories, descriptions models and methods applicable in any linguistic study, in contrast to branches of study which relate linguistics to the research of other areas.General linguistics can be further divided into theoretical linguistics (micro-linguistics) and application of linguistics (macro-linguistics).1.2.1 Theoretical linguistics:1)Phnetics :the branch of linguistics which studies the characteristics of speech sounds and provides methods for their description, classification and transcription.2) Phonology : studies how sounds are put together and used to convey meanings in communication.3)Morphology: study of the way in which the smallest meaningful components called morpheme are arranged to form words.4) Syntax[‘sintæks]: s tudies the rules governing the combination of words into sentences5)Semantics [si’mæntiks]: the study of meaning in isolation, statically out of context.1.2.2 Application of linguistics(2-8了解即可)1) Pragmatics: the dynamic study of meaning in context.2) Applied linguistics: application of linguistics theories, principles, methods and research findings to any language connected areas (broad sense), to language teaching esp to the teaching of foreign or second language (narrow sense) It includes language acquisition, language testing, language evaluation.3) Sociolinguistics: the study of social factors of language such as education background, economic status, sex and its relation with society. It includes language norm, language change and language policy.4) Psycolinguistics: studies the correlation between linguistic behavior and psychological processes that are believed to underlie that behavior. it aims to answer three questions:1) how human work when we use language;2)how we acquire our mother tongue ; 3)how we percept and internalize the information we receive in communication.5) Anthropological linguistics: it uses the theories and methods of anthropology to study language variation and language use in relation to the cultural patterns and beliefs of man.6) Neurolinguistics : studies the neurological basis of language development and use in human beings.7) Mathematical linguistics: studies the mathematical features of language by employing models and concepts of mathematics.8) Computational linguistics; approaches in which mathematical techniques and concepts are applied with theaid of computer machine. Translation or automatic translation; project which teaches machine how to recognize speech sounds and therefore words (speech synthesis)1.3 important distinctions in linguistics ( 重点)1.3.1 Prescriptive and descriptive [Descriptive →objective Prescriptive→subjective ]♦If a linguistic study describes and analyzes the language people actually use , it is descriptive(描写性)♦If it aims to lay down rules for correct behavior, that is to tell people what they should say and what they should not say, It is called Prescriptive(规定性).Traditional grammar is Prescriptive, while modern linguistics is descriptive.1.3.2 Synchronic (共时) vs diachronic (历时)♦The description of language at some point in time is a Synchronic study. (Periodical study)♦The description of language as it changes through time is a diachronic study. (Hisistorical study)1.3.3 Speech and WritingTwo major media of communication,speech is primary to writing.1.3.4 Langue (语言) and Parole (言语)♦Ferdinand de Saussure (1857—1913), pioneer of semiotics (符号学) ,he is the father of modern linguistics.♦Course in General Linguistics published in 1916. Saussure’s work marked the beginning of modern linguistics. ♦Langue refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all members of a speech community. It is a set of rules and conventions which all language users all have to abide by. It is abstract, not the language people actually use. ♦Parole refers to the realization of langue in actual use . It is concrete, naturally occurring language event.1.3.5 competence(语言能力)and performance (语言运用)It was proposed by American linguistics N. Chomsky in the late 1950's.♦Competence refers to the ideal language user's knowledge of the rules of his language and,♦Performance refers to the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication,♥what linguist should study is competence, not performance, why?1) Competence is comparatively stable2) Performance is haphazard due to some social or psychological factors such as stress, anxiety and embarrassment, or mistakes such as slips of the tongues and unnecessary pauses, despite a perfect knowledge.It is a distinction between what one “knows”and what one “does”.nguage2.1 Definition of languageLanguage is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.2.2 Design features of language (重点)Design features refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication.♦Arbitrariness(任意性)It means there is no logical (intrinsic or direct) connection between sounds and meanings, or the linguistic forms bear no natural relationship to their meaning.♦ Productivity (创造性/多产性)Different sounds can be grouped to form words ,and different words can be arranged to form different sentences. Productivity is unique to human language.♦ Duality (二元性)*Language is a system consisting of two levels: Lower (sounds) and Higher (meaning)♦ At the lower level is a structure of sounds which are meaningless,which can be grouped and regrouped into a large number of units of meaning♦At the higher level, the units of meaning can be grouped and regrouped into an infinite number of sentences.Phoneme—morpheme—word—phrase—clause—sentence♦ Displacement (移位性) [2 dimensions: Temporal时间的& Spatial空间的]Language can be used to refer to things which are present or not present real or imagined, matters in the past ,present or future .♦ Cultural transmission (文化传递性)Language can be passed on from one generation to the next through teaching and learning rather than by instinct or inheritance/birth.♦ Specialization (特化作用)Linguistic signals do not normally serve any other type of purpose, such as breathing or feeding.♦ Interchangeability/reciprocity (相互性)This refers to the fact that any speaker/ sender of a linguistic signal can also be a listener/ receiver.2.3 Functions of Language1)Informational function(信息功能): transmission of information (tell story /teaching)2) Interpersonal function(人际功能): interaction between the addresser (writer) and addressee (reader) and their attitudes among each other. (personal talk)3)Performative function(施为功能): use language to change one’s social status.4)Emotive function(感情功能): change the emotional status of audience for or against some one or something.5)Phatic function(寒暄功能): maintain a comfortable relationship between people without involving any factual content (nice day/ good morning )6)Recreational function(娱乐功能): use language for sheer joy7) Meta-lingual function(元语言功能): use language to talk about language itself.CHAPTER 2 PHONOLOGY(木有讲~~)CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY(形态学)♥ What is word?Word is a unit of expression that has universal intuitive recognition by native speakers, whether in spoken or written form.♦ Three aspects of words:1) A physically definable unit:Phonological & orthographic2)The common factor underlying a set of forms.3) A grammatical unit♦ Classification of words:1) Variable and invariable words (有时态变化的词和没有变化的词)2) Lexical words(实词) and grammatical (function, form) words(虚词)3) Open-class words (开放性词) and closed-class words(封闭性词)♦ Word formation:(最重要的两种)1) Compounding(复合词)2)Derivation(派生词)3. What is Morphology?Morphology: the study of the internal structure of words and rules for word formation. In other words, it is the study of the composition of words.3.1Two sub-branches of Morphology:1) inflectional morphology屈折形态学2) derivational morphology词汇形态学3.2 Morpheme词位,语素(形位)3.2.1 Definition of morpheme♦ Morpheme: Smallest meaningful components of words.3.2.2 Allomorphs 词位变体The different/ variant forms of the same morpheme are called its allomorphs(词位变体).A morpheme needs to be represented in certain phonological and orthographic forms. one denotes its lexical meaning and the other the grammatical meaning.6.3 Types of Morphemes6.3.1 Free Morphemes 自由词位(语素)♦A free morpheme is one that can stand by itself.Free morphemes fall into two categories: content words (open-class words) & function words (closed-class words) 6.3.2 Bound Morphemes 黏着词位(语素)♦ Bound morphemes are those that cannot be used independently but have to be combined with at least one other morpheme, either free or bound, to form a word.♦Bound morphemes include two types: roots (词根) and affixes(词缀)♦Affixes are of two types: inflectional(屈折词缀)and derivational(派生词缀)1) Inflectional affixes manifest various grammatical relations such as number, tense, degree, and case.2) Derivational affixes are added to an existing form to create a word.CHAPTER 4 SYNTAX(木有讲~~)CHAPTER 5 SEMANTICS(语义学)5.1 The definition of semantics♦ Semantics is the branch of linguistics which studies meaning in language.The theme of semantics is meaning. Language must have meaning and meaning is part of language.A sentence is considered correct or acceptable if it is well-formed both grammatically and semantically.5.2 Approaches to meaning5.2.1 Meaning as naming♦The meaning of an expression is what it refers to (or denotes), stands for, or names.also called referential (or denotational) theory, or naming theory.5.2.2 Meaning as concept♦Any particular sound image is psychologically associated with a particular concept.5.2.3 Meaning as behaviour♦The meaning of an expression is the stimulus either the stimulus that evokes it or the response that it evokes, ora combination of both on particular occasions of utterance,also called behaviourism or behaviourist theory.5.2.4 Meaning as context♦The meaning is found in the context within which a particular expression is uttered.Two kinds of context are recognized: a linguistic context and a situational context.5.2.5 Meaning as truth conditions♦The sense of a declarative sentence permits you to know under what circumstances that sentence is true. Those “circumstances”are called truth conditions of the sentence. This is called truth-conditional theory/semantics,S is true if and only if P5.2.6 Meaning as useIt asserts that the meaning of an expression is just the use to which it is put in the language,also called use theory.5.3 Word meaning5.3.1 Sense and reference♦Sense(意义)relates to the complex system of relationships that hold between the linguistic elements themselves (mostly words), it is concerned with intralinguistic relations.♦Reference(所指)deals with the relationship between the linguistic elements, words, sentences, etc., and the non-linguistic world of experience.5.3.2 Seven types of meaning(记得到那七种意义就可以了~概念不用背)According to the British linguist G. Leech, meaning in its broadest sense can be classified into seven types:5.3.2.1 Conceptual meaning(概念意义)♦The meaning of words may be discussed in terms of what they denote or refer to.5.3.2.2 Connotative meaning(内涵意义)♦Connotative meaning is the communicative value that a word or a combination of words has by virtue of what refers to, over and above its purely conceptual content.Difference between connotative meaning and conceptual meaning♥Connotative meaning is peripheral, and relatively unstable.♥In addition, connotative meaning is indeterminate and open-ended in a sense in which conceptual meaning is not.5.3.2.3 Social meaning(社会意义)♦Social meaning is that which an expression conveys about the social circumstances of its use. It chiefly includes stylistic meaning and the illocutionary force of an utterance.5.3.2.4 Affective meaning(情感意义)♦Affective meaning or emotive meaning refers to the fact that language reflects the feelings of a speaker.5.3.2.5 Reflective meaning(联想意义)♦Reflective meaning is the meaning which arises in cases of multiple conceptual meaning, when one sense of a word forms part of our response to another sense.5.3.2.6 Collocative meaning(搭配意义)♦Collocative meaning is composed of the associations a word obtains because of the meanings of words which tend to occur in its circumstances.5.3.2.7 Thematic meaning(主题意义)♦Thematic meaning is what is communicated by the way in which a speaker or writer organizes the message, in terms of ordering, focus, and emphasis.5.3.3 Semantic relations between words(记名字就可以了~~那两个有differences的要注意)♦Homonymy(同音异义):words having different meaning have the same form.Words are identical in sound =>homophones(同音异形异义字)Words are identical in form =>homographes(同形异义字)Words are identical in sound and form =>homonyms(同形同音异义字)♦Polysemy(一词多义):one word having two or more meanings which are all related by extension. Difference between polysemy and HomonymyThe distinction can be found in the typical dictionary entry for words. If a word has two or more meanings (polysemic), then there will be a single entry, with a numbered list of the different meanings of the word. If the two words are treated as homonyms, they will typically have two separate entries.♦Synonymy(近义词):the sense relation of “sameness of meaning”.♦Antonymy(反义词):refers to oppositemess of meaning.♦Hyponymy(下义关系):the relationship where the meaning of one word is included in the meaning of another.Hyponymy: X is a kind of Y eg:Potato is a kind of vegetable,♦Meronymy(部分与整体):the semantic relationship which obtains between “parts”and “wholes”body.Meronymy: X is a part of Y eg:Head is a part of body.5.4 Sentence meaningPredication (句子) consist of Arugement(变元)&Predicates(谓语)consist of Features(语义特征)5.5 Semantic relations between sentences(名字要记到,最好晓得例子)♦Entailment(蕴含关系)♦Presupposition(预设关系)♦Synonymy(同义关系)♦Inconsistency(不一致关系)♦Implicature(暗含关系)5.6 Three Theoretical Approach(了解第一个就可以了,其他的两个晓得名字就OK~)5.6.1 Componential analysis(成分分析)♦Componential analysis claims that all lexical items can be analyzed into a set of semantic components or semantic features which may be universal.♦The problems:It is not easy to show relations of antonymy or oppositeness of meaning.5.6.2 Semantic Field Theory♦ A semantic field is a group of lexemes.(词位)5.6.3 Cognitive Semantics(认知语义学)♦It identifies meaning with conceptualization-the structure and processes which are part of mental experience.CHAPTER 6 PRAGMATICS6.1 The definition of pragmatics♦Pragmatics can be defined as the study of language in use.6.2 The scope of pragmatics♦Micropragmatics(微观语用学)The study of language use in smaller contexts. Phenomena such as reference(指称), deixis(指示), anaphora (回指)and presupposition(预设)are the topics in this field.♦In pragmatics,reference can be defined as an act by which a speaker or writer uses language to enable a hearer or reader to identify something.♦In semantics, reference is often assumed that the words we use to indentify things are in some direct relationship to those things.♦Macropragmatics(宏观语用学)♦Metapragmatics(元语用学)6.3 Pragmatic theories6.3.1 Speech act theory(言语行为理论)(晓得名字,记到一个例子就可以了~~)♦Speech act theory was proposed by J. L. Austin , which proposed that language is not only used to inform or to describe things, it is often used to “do things”, to perform acts.A. locutionary act(言中行为): the utterance of a sentence with determinate sense and referenceB. Illocutionary act(言外行为): the making of a statement, offer, promise, etc. in uttering a sentence, by virtue of the conventional force associated with it.C. Perlocutionary act(言后行为):the bringing about of effects on the audience by means of uttering the sentence, such effects being special to the circumstances.e.g. The weather is fine.言中行为:仅仅是描述天气好言外行为:天气那么好,我们逃课嘛去逛街嘛言后行为:我们没有去上课,去逛街去了~~6.3.2 Searl's classification of illocutionary acts(塞尔对言外行为的分类)(记名字和类型)♦Representatives(阐述类):statements of fact, assertions, conclusions, and descriptions♦Directives(指令类):They are commands, orders, requests, suggestions♦Commissives(承诺类):They are promises, threats, refusals, and pledges.♦Expressives(表达类):They are apologizing,thanking,congratulating.♦Declarations(宣告类):The speaker has to have a special institutioanl role, in specific context, in order to perform a declaration appropriately.6.3.3 Indirect speech act(间接言语行为)♦三种基本句子形式及其对应功能:Declarative(陈述句) => statementInterrogative(疑问句)=> q uestionImperative(祈使句)=> command♦当句子形式与其基本功能不相互对应时,则此时即发生了“间接言语行为”6.3.4 The cooperative principle(合作原则)6.3.4.1 The cooperative principle and its maxims(合作原则及准则)比较重要,都记一下嘛`~~♦The Maxim of Quality(质量原则):Try to make your contribution one that is true(i) Do not say what you believe to be false;(ii) Do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence.♦Maxim of Quantity(数量原则):(i) Make your contribution as informative as required (for the current purposes of the exchange) .(ii) Do not make your contribution more informative than required.♦Maxim of Relation(相关原则): Be relative.♦Maxim of Manner(礼貌原则): Be perspicuous.(i) Avoid obscurity of expression.(ii) Avoid ambiguity.(iii) Be brief.(iv) Be orderly.6.3.4.2 Conversational implicature(话语暗示)♦Conversational implicature is a kind of extra meaning that is not contained in the utterance.♦According to Grice, conversational implicatures can arise from either strictly and directly observing or deliberately and ostentatiously flouting the maxims.6.3.5 The politeness principle(礼貌原则)(呜呜~我也不晓得这个重要不,还是了解一下嘛~~)♦Tact Maxim (得体原则)a) Minimize cost to otherb) Maximize benefit to other♦Generosity Maxim(慷慨原则)a) Minimize benefit to selfb) Maximize cost to self ]♦Approbation Maxim(赞扬原则)a) Minimize dispraise of otherb) Maximize praise of other♦Modesty Maxim(谦虚原则)a) Minimize praise of selfb) Maximize dispraise of self♦Agreement Maxim(赞同原则)a) Minimize disagreement between self and otherb) Maximize agreement between self and other♦Sympathy Maxim (同情原则)a) Minimize antipathy between self and otherb) Maximize sympathy between self and otherCHAPTER 11 SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION(二语习得)(还木有上完哈,我不晓得那些是重点,上完了补给你们哈~~)♦Second Language Acquisition (SLA):refers to the systematic study of how one person acquires a secondlanguage subsequent to his native language.♦Target language (TL)(目的语): the language which a person is learning, in contrast to a first language or mother tongue.。
(完整word版)普通语言学教程笔记(索绪尔)
《普通语言学教程》索绪尔绪论第一章语言学史一瞥语法(规范)-语文学(过于注重书面语)-比较语文学或比较语法(只比较)-新语法学派(语言集团集体精神的产物)第二章语言学的材料和任务;与毗邻科学的关系语言学的任务是:a 对一切能够得到的语言进行描写并整理他们的历史,尽可能重建每个语系的母语;b 寻求在一切语言中永恒地普遍地起作用的力量,整理出能概况一切历史特殊现象的一般规律;c 确定自己的界限和定义。
它与社会心理学、生理学、语文学相关。
语言学也有实际用途,特别是对于那些利用文献的人,另外对一般修养也很重要。
第三章语言学的对象定义——在任何时候,语言都是现行制度和过去的产物。
我们的研究方法是一开始就站在语言的阵地上,把它当做言语活动的其他一切表现的准则。
语言和言语活动不能混为一谈,它只是言语活动的一个确定的部分,而且当然是一个主要部分,它既是言语机能的社会产物,又是社会集团为了使个人有可能行使这机能所采用的一整套必不可少的规约。
语言本身是一个整体,一个分类的原则。
它是一种约定俗成的东西,人们同意使用什么符号,这符号的性质是无关轻重的。
对人类天赋的不是口头的言语活动,而是构成语言——即一套和不同的观念相当的不同的符号——的机能。
人们说话的机能——不管是天赋的或非天赋的——只有借助于集体所创造和提供的工具才能运用,所以,说语言使言语活动成为统一体,绝不是空想。
语言在言语活动事实中的地位——言语循环重建:心理现象-生理过程-物理过程-生理过程-心理现象(c-i)这一主动过程称为执行部分,(i-c)这一被动过程称为接受部分,此外还有联合和配置的机能。
语言是社会的、主要的,言语是个人的、偶然的、从属的。
语言的特征是:1 他是言语活动事实的混杂的总体中的一个十分确定的对象,是言语的社会部分。
2 语言是人们能够分出来加以研究的对象。
3 言语是异质的,而规定下来的语言是同质的,它是一种符号系统,在系统中,只有意义和音响形象的结合是主要的,符号的两个部分都是心理的。
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CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION(高叔叔说这章要考50分,所以东西有点多~)1.Linguistics1.1Definition: linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.Three key words:♦Language:preceded by the zero article implies not any particular language but language in general.♦Study: investigate examine research♦Scientific:observation →generalization→hypotheses formation→data collection→hypotheses testing→ theory formulation How to make a study "scientific"?1) Exhaustiveness: gather all the materialsrelevant to one's investigation and give theman adequate explanation.2) Consistency: make no contradiction between parts of the total statement3) Economy: other things being equal, simpler shorter analysis is better.4) Objectivity: be as objective as possible in describing and analyzing the data, allowing no prejudice to influence one’s generalization.1.2 the scope of linguisticsGeneral linguistics: the study of language as a whole. This deals with the basic concepts, theories, descriptions models and methods applicable in any linguistic study, in contrast to branches of study which relate linguistics to the research of other areas.General linguistics can be further divided into theoretical linguistics (micro-linguistics) and application of linguistics (macro-linguistics).1.2.1 Theoretical linguistics:1)Phnetics :the branch of linguistics which studies the characteristics of speech sounds and provides methods for their description, classification and transcription.2) Phonology : studies how sounds are put together and used to convey meanings in communication.3)Morphology: study of the way in which the smallest meaningful components called morpheme are arranged to form words.4) Syntax[‘sintæks]: s tudies the rules governing the combination of words into sentences5)Semantics [si’mæntiks]: the study of meaning in isolation, statically out of context.1.2.2 Application of linguistics(2-8了解即可)1) Pragmatics: the dynamic study of meaning in context.2) Applied linguistics: application of linguistics theories, principles, methods and research findings to any language connected areas (broad sense), to language teaching esp to the teaching of foreign or second language (narrow sense) It includes language acquisition, language testing, language evaluation.3) Sociolinguistics: the study of social factors of language such as education background, economic status, sex and its relation with society. It includes language norm, language change and language policy.4) Psycolinguistics: studies the correlation between linguistic behavior and psychological processes that are believed to underlie that behavior. it aims to answer three questions:1) how human work when we use language;2)how we acquire our mother tongue ; 3)how we percept and internalize the information we receive in communication.5) Anthropological linguistics: it uses the theories and methods of anthropology to study language variation and language use in relation to the cultural patterns and beliefs of man.6) Neurolinguistics : studies the neurological basis of language development and use in human beings.7) Mathematical linguistics: studies the mathematical features of language by employing models and concepts of mathematics.8) Computational linguistics; approaches in which mathematical techniques and concepts are applied with theaid of computer machine. Translation or automatic translation; project which teaches machine how to recognize speech sounds and therefore words (speech synthesis)1.3 important distinctions in linguistics ( 重点)1.3.1 Prescriptive and descriptive [Descriptive →objective Prescriptive→subjective ]♦If a linguistic study describes and analyzes the language people actually use , it is descriptive(描写性)♦If it aims to lay down rules for correct behavior, that is to tell people what they should say and what they should not say, It is called Prescriptive(规定性).Traditional grammar is Prescriptive, while modern linguistics is descriptive.1.3.2 Synchronic (共时) vs diachronic (历时)♦The description of language at some point in time is a Synchronic study. (Periodical study)♦The description of language as it changes through time is a diachronic study. (Hisistorical study)1.3.3 Speech and WritingTwo major media of communication,speech is primary to writing.1.3.4 Langue (语言) and Parole (言语)♦Ferdinand de Saussure (1857—1913), pioneer of semiotics (符号学) ,he is the father of modern linguistics.♦Course in General Linguistics published in 1916. Saussure’s work marked the beginning of modern linguistics. ♦Langue refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all members of a speech community. It is a set of rules and conventions which all language users all have to abide by. It is abstract, not the language people actually use. ♦Parole refers to the realization of langue in actual use . It is concrete, naturally occurring language event.1.3.5 competence(语言能力)and performance (语言运用)It was proposed by American linguistics N. Chomsky in the late 1950's.♦Competence refers to the ideal language user's knowledge of the rules of his language and,♦Performance refers to the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication,♥what linguist should study is competence, not performance, why?1) Competence is comparatively stable2) Performance is haphazard due to some social or psychological factors such as stress, anxiety and embarrassment, or mistakes such as slips of the tongues and unnecessary pauses, despite a perfect knowledge.It is a distinction between what one “knows”and what one “does”.nguage2.1 Definition of languageLanguage is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.2.2 Design features of language (重点)Design features refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication.♦Arbitrariness(任意性)It means there is no logical (intrinsic or direct) connection between sounds and meanings, or the linguistic forms bear no natural relationship to their meaning.♦ Productivity (创造性/多产性)Different sounds can be grouped to form words ,and different words can be arranged to form different sentences. Productivity is unique to human language.♦ Duality (二元性)*Language is a system consisting of two levels: Lower (sounds) and Higher (meaning)♦ At the lower level is a structure of sounds which are meaningless,which can be grouped and regrouped into a large number of units of meaning♦At the higher level, the units of meaning can be grouped and regrouped into an infinite number of sentences.Phoneme—morpheme—word—phrase—clause—sentence♦ Displacement (移位性) [2 dimensions: Temporal时间的& Spatial空间的]Language can be used to refer to things which are present or not present real or imagined, matters in the past ,present or future .♦ Cultural transmission (文化传递性)Language can be passed on from one generation to the next through teaching and learning rather than by instinct or inheritance/birth.♦ Specialization (特化作用)Linguistic signals do not normally serve any other type of purpose, such as breathing or feeding.♦ Interchangeability/reciprocity (相互性)This refers to the fact that any speaker/ sender of a linguistic signal can also be a listener/ receiver.2.3 Functions of Language1)Informational function(信息功能): transmission of information (tell story /teaching)2) Interpersonal function(人际功能): interaction between the addresser (writer) and addressee (reader) and their attitudes among each other. (personal talk)3)Performative function(施为功能): use language to change one’s social status.4)Emotive function(感情功能): change the emotional status of audience for or against some one or something.5)Phatic function(寒暄功能): maintain a comfortable relationship between people without involving any factual content (nice day/ good morning )6)Recreational function(娱乐功能): use language for sheer joy7) Meta-lingual function(元语言功能): use language to talk about language itself.CHAPTER 2 PHONOLOGY(木有讲~~)CHAPTER 3 MORPHOLOGY(形态学)♥ What is word?Word is a unit of expression that has universal intuitive recognition by native speakers, whether in spoken or written form.♦ Three aspects of words:1) A physically definable unit:Phonological & orthographic2)The common factor underlying a set of forms.3) A grammatical unit♦ Classification of words:1) Variable and invariable words (有时态变化的词和没有变化的词)2) Lexical words(实词) and grammatical (function, form) words(虚词)3) Open-class words (开放性词) and closed-class words(封闭性词)♦ Word formation:(最重要的两种)1) Compounding(复合词)2)Derivation(派生词)3. What is Morphology?Morphology: the study of the internal structure of words and rules for word formation. In other words, it is the study of the composition of words.3.1Two sub-branches of Morphology:1) inflectional morphology屈折形态学2) derivational morphology词汇形态学3.2 Morpheme词位,语素(形位)3.2.1 Definition of morpheme♦ Morpheme: Smallest meaningful components of words.3.2.2 Allomorphs 词位变体The different/ variant forms of the same morpheme are called its allomorphs(词位变体).A morpheme needs to be represented in certain phonological and orthographic forms. one denotes its lexical meaning and the other the grammatical meaning.6.3 Types of Morphemes6.3.1 Free Morphemes 自由词位(语素)♦A free morpheme is one that can stand by itself.Free morphemes fall into two categories: content words (open-class words) & function words (closed-class words) 6.3.2 Bound Morphemes 黏着词位(语素)♦ Bound morphemes are those that cannot be used independently but have to be combined with at least one other morpheme, either free or bound, to form a word.♦Bound morphemes include two types: roots (词根) and affixes(词缀)♦Affixes are of two types: inflectional(屈折词缀)and derivational(派生词缀)1) Inflectional affixes manifest various grammatical relations such as number, tense, degree, and case.2) Derivational affixes are added to an existing form to create a word.CHAPTER 4 SYNTAX(木有讲~~)CHAPTER 5 SEMANTICS(语义学)5.1 The definition of semantics♦ Semantics is the branch of linguistics which studies meaning in language.The theme of semantics is meaning. Language must have meaning and meaning is part of language.A sentence is considered correct or acceptable if it is well-formed both grammatically and semantically.5.2 Approaches to meaning5.2.1 Meaning as naming♦The meaning of an expression is what it refers to (or denotes), stands for, or names.also called referential (or denotational) theory, or naming theory.5.2.2 Meaning as concept♦Any particular sound image is psychologically associated with a particular concept.5.2.3 Meaning as behaviour♦The meaning of an expression is the stimulus either the stimulus that evokes it or the response that it evokes, ora combination of both on particular occasions of utterance,also called behaviourism or behaviourist theory.5.2.4 Meaning as context♦The meaning is found in the context within which a particular expression is uttered.Two kinds of context are recognized: a linguistic context and a situational context.5.2.5 Meaning as truth conditions♦The sense of a declarative sentence permits you to know under what circumstances that sentence is true. Those “circumstances”are called truth conditions of the sentence. This is called truth-conditional theory/semantics,S is true if and only if P5.2.6 Meaning as useIt asserts that the meaning of an expression is just the use to which it is put in the language,also called use theory.5.3 Word meaning5.3.1 Sense and reference♦Sense(意义)relates to the complex system of relationships that hold between the linguistic elements themselves (mostly words), it is concerned with intralinguistic relations.♦Reference(所指)deals with the relationship between the linguistic elements, words, sentences, etc., and the non-linguistic world of experience.5.3.2 Seven types of meaning(记得到那七种意义就可以了~概念不用背)According to the British linguist G. Leech, meaning in its broadest sense can be classified into seven types:5.3.2.1 Conceptual meaning(概念意义)♦The meaning of words may be discussed in terms of what they denote or refer to.5.3.2.2 Connotative meaning(内涵意义)♦Connotative meaning is the communicative value that a word or a combination of words has by virtue of what refers to, over and above its purely conceptual content.Difference between connotative meaning and conceptual meaning♥Connotative meaning is peripheral, and relatively unstable.♥In addition, connotative meaning is indeterminate and open-ended in a sense in which conceptual meaning is not.5.3.2.3 Social meaning(社会意义)♦Social meaning is that which an expression conveys about the social circumstances of its use. It chiefly includes stylistic meaning and the illocutionary force of an utterance.5.3.2.4 Affective meaning(情感意义)♦Affective meaning or emotive meaning refers to the fact that language reflects the feelings of a speaker.5.3.2.5 Reflective meaning(联想意义)♦Reflective meaning is the meaning which arises in cases of multiple conceptual meaning, when one sense of a word forms part of our response to another sense.5.3.2.6 Collocative meaning(搭配意义)♦Collocative meaning is composed of the associations a word obtains because of the meanings of words which tend to occur in its circumstances.5.3.2.7 Thematic meaning(主题意义)♦Thematic meaning is what is communicated by the way in which a speaker or writer organizes the message, in terms of ordering, focus, and emphasis.5.3.3 Semantic relations between words(记名字就可以了~~那两个有differences的要注意)♦Homonymy(同音异义):words having different meaning have the same form.Words are identical in sound =>homophones(同音异形异义字)Words are identical in form =>homographes(同形异义字)Words are identical in sound and form =>homonyms(同形同音异义字)♦Polysemy(一词多义):one word having two or more meanings which are all related by extension. Difference between polysemy and HomonymyThe distinction can be found in the typical dictionary entry for words. If a word has two or more meanings (polysemic), then there will be a single entry, with a numbered list of the different meanings of the word. If the two words are treated as homonyms, they will typically have two separate entries.♦Synonymy(近义词):the sense relation of “sameness of meaning”.♦Antonymy(反义词):refers to oppositemess of meaning.♦Hyponymy(下义关系):the relationship where the meaning of one word is included in the meaning of another.Hyponymy: X is a kind of Y eg:Potato is a kind of vegetable,♦Meronymy(部分与整体):the semantic relationship which obtains between “parts”and “wholes”body.Meronymy: X is a part of Y eg:Head is a part of body.5.4 Sentence meaningPredication (句子) consist of Arugement(变元)&Predicates(谓语)consist of Features(语义特征)5.5 Semantic relations between sentences(名字要记到,最好晓得例子)♦Entailment(蕴含关系)♦Presupposition(预设关系)♦Synonymy(同义关系)♦Inconsistency(不一致关系)♦Implicature(暗含关系)5.6 Three Theoretical Approach(了解第一个就可以了,其他的两个晓得名字就OK~)5.6.1 Componential analysis(成分分析)♦Componential analysis claims that all lexical items can be analyzed into a set of semantic components or semantic features which may be universal.♦The problems:It is not easy to show relations of antonymy or oppositeness of meaning.5.6.2 Semantic Field Theory♦ A semantic field is a group of lexemes.(词位)5.6.3 Cognitive Semantics(认知语义学)♦It identifies meaning with conceptualization-the structure and processes which are part of mental experience.CHAPTER 6 PRAGMATICS6.1 The definition of pragmatics♦Pragmatics can be defined as the study of language in use.6.2 The scope of pragmatics♦Micropragmatics(微观语用学)The study of language use in smaller contexts. Phenomena such as reference(指称), deixis(指示), anaphora (回指)and presupposition(预设)are the topics in this field.♦In pragmatics,reference can be defined as an act by which a speaker or writer uses language to enable a hearer or reader to identify something.♦In semantics, reference is often assumed that the words we use to indentify things are in some direct relationship to those things.♦Macropragmatics(宏观语用学)♦Metapragmatics(元语用学)6.3 Pragmatic theories6.3.1 Speech act theory(言语行为理论)(晓得名字,记到一个例子就可以了~~)♦Speech act theory was proposed by J. L. Austin , which proposed that language is not only used to inform or to describe things, it is often used to “do things”, to perform acts.A. locutionary act(言中行为): the utterance of a sentence with determinate sense and referenceB. Illocutionary act(言外行为): the making of a statement, offer, promise, etc. in uttering a sentence, by virtue of the conventional force associated with it.C. Perlocutionary act(言后行为):the bringing about of effects on the audience by means of uttering the sentence, such effects being special to the circumstances.e.g. The weather is fine.言中行为:仅仅是描述天气好言外行为:天气那么好,我们逃课嘛去逛街嘛言后行为:我们没有去上课,去逛街去了~~6.3.2 Searl's classification of illocutionary acts(塞尔对言外行为的分类)(记名字和类型)♦Representatives(阐述类):statements of fact, assertions, conclusions, and descriptions♦Directives(指令类):They are commands, orders, requests, suggestions♦Commissives(承诺类):They are promises, threats, refusals, and pledges.♦Expressives(表达类):They are apologizing,thanking,congratulating.♦Declarations(宣告类):The speaker has to have a special institutioanl role, in specific context, in order to perform a declaration appropriately.6.3.3 Indirect speech act(间接言语行为)♦三种基本句子形式及其对应功能:Declarative(陈述句) => statementInterrogative(疑问句)=> q uestionImperative(祈使句)=> command♦当句子形式与其基本功能不相互对应时,则此时即发生了“间接言语行为”6.3.4 The cooperative principle(合作原则)6.3.4.1 The cooperative principle and its maxims(合作原则及准则)比较重要,都记一下嘛`~~♦The Maxim of Quality(质量原则):Try to make your contribution one that is true(i) Do not say what you believe to be false;(ii) Do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence.♦Maxim of Quantity(数量原则):(i) Make your contribution as informative as required (for the current purposes of the exchange) .(ii) Do not make your contribution more informative than required.♦Maxim of Relation(相关原则): Be relative.♦Maxim of Manner(礼貌原则): Be perspicuous.(i) Avoid obscurity of expression.(ii) Avoid ambiguity.(iii) Be brief.(iv) Be orderly.6.3.4.2 Conversational implicature(话语暗示)♦Conversational implicature is a kind of extra meaning that is not contained in the utterance.♦According to Grice, conversational implicatures can arise from either strictly and directly observing or deliberately and ostentatiously flouting the maxims.6.3.5 The politeness principle(礼貌原则)(呜呜~我也不晓得这个重要不,还是了解一下嘛~~)♦Tact Maxim (得体原则)a) Minimize cost to otherb) Maximize benefit to other♦Generosity Maxim(慷慨原则)a) Minimize benefit to selfb) Maximize cost to self ]♦Approbation Maxim(赞扬原则)a) Minimize dispraise of otherb) Maximize praise of other♦Modesty Maxim(谦虚原则)a) Minimize praise of selfb) Maximize dispraise of self♦Agreement Maxim(赞同原则)a) Minimize disagreement between self and otherb) Maximize agreement between self and other♦Sympathy Maxim (同情原则)a) Minimize antipathy between self and otherb) Maximize sympathy between self and otherCHAPTER 11 SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION(二语习得)(还木有上完哈,我不晓得那些是重点,上完了补给你们哈~~)♦Second Language Acquisition (SLA):refers to the systematic study of how one person acquires a secondlanguage subsequent to his native language.♦Target language (TL)(目的语): the language which a person is learning, in contrast to a first language or mother tongue.。