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NATURE OF LANGUAGE
Reported by: Susanna Rose A. LabastillaMA Speech Communication
What is Language?
Language is a speech. Speech is language. The written record but a secondary representation of the language. – Charles Fries
Language is a system of signals conforming to the rules which constitutes its grammar. It is a set of culturally transmitted behavior patterns shared by a group of individuals. – Joseph Greenberg
What is Language?
Language is a code: a set of elements forms composed of sounds, letters, their combinations…into words, sentences, etc…used for communication between individuals who share the same rules. – Roger Bell
Language is a system which relates meaning to substance. It is a mental phenomenon that is innate. All children in the world over acquire a mother language. – Noam Chomsky
What is Language?
When we use language we are not just saying something. We are doing something as well, like promising, asking information, etc. – Searle and Austin
Language has two elements. One is cognitive, active which comprises the linguistic features of the language. The other is emotive or effective. - Oller
What is Language?
Meaning does not reside in the words per se but in the context of the situation. – Malinowski
For communication to take place, the sender and receiver of the message should have shared presuppositions. - Widdowson
Function of Language
Do you recall what Searle and Austin said about the nature of language?
They said----when we say something we are also doing something as we say it.What They Say What They are Doing
A. You did this.B. Of course not!
AccusingDenying
A. Who did it then?B. Why don’t you try
asking Ben?
Asking informationMaking suggestion
A. I’ll do that.B. I’m sorry I was quick
to blame you.
Accepting suggestionApologizing
Shifting Theories of LanguageTheory A Theory B
First a bright person comes up with an idea and expound on it. This is his thesis. Others see the wisdom of his assertion or thesis and so they follow him and a school of thought is born.But then another brilliant person reacts to what the first person said and a takes the opposite stand . That becomes the antithesis. He too, will have followers of his own.A third one comes and sees the wisdom of both school of thought. She tries to put the two together and so comes up with the synthesis.But the swing to the other end continues, followed by another reaction, resulting to a continuous swinging from one end to the other. But with its swing and counter movement, something new is added.
First, some perceptive mind observes what happens and comes up with an idea or paradigm. That results in the emergence of paradigm.Other agree with the idea and even try to refine it. So then paradigm enter the mature science period and many schools subscribing to that paradigm develop.Then someone find a follow or anomaly in the paradigm at first , there are attempts to reconcile the anomaly. But soon nothing can be done to correct and so a new paradigm is born.The new paradigm goes through the same process of maturing until an anomaly is again discovered and the cycle continues. But with each cycle and new paradigm, something is added.
Shifting Theories of Language
Theory AThesis
Antithesis
synthesis
Shifting Theories of Language
Theory BEmergency of Paradigm
Refinement and
Maturity of Paradigm
Discovery of Anomaly in
the Paradigm
Attempts to reconcile
the anomaly
Shift to the new
paradigm
In the beginning…. Latin based grammar Latin was classical language Aged of Classical Humanism 1900s language were studied independently as a
system Sounds as the smallest unit Sounds – words – utterance – sentences –
paragraph or discourse Language is a structure, a system, where the lower
units combined to form the next higher units. The structural approach of language prevailed up
to 1960s
In the beginning….
Discourse Paradigm
Grammar of Sentences
Meaningful Units-Words and Affixes
Significant Sounds
1960s Anomaly….
In the 1960s, an anomaly was found in the theory of language.
The anomaly was that, sometimes you use the same form but come up with different meanings.
The function of utterance counts; this is its illocutionary force.
The expected response is the perlocutionary force
Three Forces
In such an instance were all three forces – lucotionary, illocutinary, and perlocutionary – are considered, language is viewed not just as a system made up of forms but as a means of communication.
Communicative Competence
Communicative Competence
Linguistic Competen
ce
SociolinguisticsCompeten
ce
Discoursal Competenc
e
Strategic Competenc
e
What really is language? Language sets human being apart from other animals. Getting to speak a language is innate among human
beings. This means that every person is programmed to acquire
hi/her native language provided he/she is exposed to it. The ability to speak language is specific to our species Even without formal training, a child by the time he/she
reaches five years old, has internalized the grammar of his/her native tongue.
Every native speaker therefore, becomes competence in his/her own language.
Those who become competent in two languages are said to be bilingual while those who attain competence in more than two languages are called polyglots.
Linguistic
Linguistics is defined by William G. Moulton as “ the branch of learning which studies the language of any and all human societies: how such a language is constructed; how it varies through space and changes through time; how it is related to other languages; how it is used by its speakers.”
Moulton points out that fundamental to all branches of linguistics are some basic questions namely:
What is language? How does it work? What happens when a speaker says
something and a hearer understands him/her?
Two Main Branches of Linguistics Theoretical linguistics is concerned with the
nature of language and its components. Grammarians study the significant units of a
language and their patterns of arrangement. They try to arrive at the rules of correct usage of the language they are investigating and they put down their findings into writing.
Applied linguistics has to do with language use, how it is learned and acquired, and how it may be taught.
Those concerned with what enables one to acquire a language and with methods of teaching a language are applied linguists.
Linguistics
Theoretical
Linguistics
Synchronic Studies
Diachronic Studies
Descriptive
linguistics
Historical linguistic
s
Comparative
linguistics
Discourse
SyntaxMorpholog
yPhonolog
y
Bound Morphem
es
Free Morpheme
sAcoustic Phonetics
Articulatory
Phonetics
Structural
Grammar
Semantic GrammarPedagogi
cal Grammar
Genre Analysis
Text Analysis
What is Applied Linguistics? Field of study that identifies,
investigates, and offers solution to language related problems.
It can be applied to all aspects of language use. It deals with mother, foreign, second language acquisition.
It describes the language, and teaches how it is used.
What is Applied Linguistics?
Linguistics
Applied Linguistics
Education
Applied Linguistics Application
Clinical Linguistics – analysis and treatment of language disorders
Language Acquisition – language 1 and language 2
Teaching and Learning Foreign Languages – developing foreign language teaching methods
Educational Linguistics – the use of the mother tongue in school
Applied Linguistics Application
Lexicography – theory and practice in organizing dictionaries; methods and techniques for creating dictionaries
Computational Linguistics – the use of computers in language analysis and use
Machine Translation – computerized translation
ASR – Automatic Speech Recognition
Applied Linguistics Application
Language Assessment – to measure students learning of languages, to determine what a student knows and/ or can do and how well instruction is proceeding.
Forensic Linguistics – the application of linguistic knowledge, methods and insights to the context of law, language, crime investigation, trial, experts, court, evidence, law, jurislinguistique.
Applied Linguistics Application Data Mining – the process of processing large
volumes of data usually stored in a database and searching for patterns and relationship within that data. It is automatic extraction and processing of data.
Language pedagogy – theory of developing teaching methods
Psycholinguistics – the study of the psychological factors that enable humans to acquire, use, comprehend and produce speech, relationship between language and human behavior.
Applied Linguistics Application Internet Linguistics – it studies new
language styles and forms that have arisen under the influence of the Internet and Short Message Service (SMS)
Sociolinguistics – study of the link between language and society
Neurolinguistics – describes the aplication of linguistic theories to the classification and analysis of acquired disorders of language or speech in patients with brain damage
Applied Linguistics Application Language Interpretation – facilitating
of oral or sign language communication between user of different languages
Corpus linguistics – the study of language as expressed in samples (corpora) or “real world” text; it is approach to deriving a set of abstract rules b y which a natural language is governed or else relates to another language
Applied Linguistics Application Text Analysis – written discourse Language Culture, and Pragmatics –
cultural aspects in language teaching in intercultural communication
Language Control/ Dialectology – study of linguistic dialect, variations in language and is based primarily on geographic distribution; divergence of two local dialect from a common ancestor and synchronic variation
APPLIED LINGUISTICS
Education – teaching, learning,
acquisition, assessment
Linguistics – The study of the
nature, structure, and variation of
language, including
phonetics, phonology,
morphology and the study of
human speech, language form,
language meaning and language in
context
Anthropology – the scientific study of the origin and
behavior of man, including the
physical, social, and cultural
development of societies and
cultures
Psychology – the science of mind and behavior, and the application of such
knowledge of various spheres of
human activity, such as education,
health, occupational and employment
services
Sociology – the scientific study of
human social behavior and study of the
society
Important Contribution of Linguistics to the Classroom Teacher
I still believe that the most important contribution that linguistics can make to the classroom teacher is in reshaping his view of language and of language learning. These are matters of attitude and concept rather than one of grammatical analysis as compared with another or of a series of judgments about the acceptability of any number of specific forms and expressions. Linguistically sound materials can be expected to produce satisfactory results only when they are used by linguistically knowledgeable and sophisticated teachers. Such sophistication rests upon an understanding of certain principles.
- Albert M. Marckwardt
Language Teachers should…
Focus on change and development of :
* her views on language* her ideas about language
learning* her attitudes* her concepts
Remember….
It might be pointed out that no matter how good the findings of linguistics are, if they are not picked up and put to use by the teacher, then they are to no avail. They will, in effect, never reach the students who are the end users.
It might be pointed out that knowledge is in a continuous state of flux. What might be true today may be modified some years hence.
As such, it is not so much the findings that count but rather the openness of the teacher to new developments and her willingness to give them a try.
Remember….
Any materials of linguistics will produce good results if it is in the hand of knowledgeable teacher.
Aware of the principles underlying the material, perceptive teacher will know what to do with it and how it if need be so it may be used to advantage.
Remember….
The language teacher, therefore, are a very important cog in the machine of language teaching and language learning.
In the words of a movie scriptwriter, the song
(in this case theoretical linguistics) is important, but in the long run it is “ the singer and not the song” ( here referring to the language teacher) who puts life to it.
Thank you for listening. …….