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Linguistics
                                                  • is systematic study of human language
                                                  • lies at the crossroads of the humanities
     Introduction to Linguistics                    and the social sciences
                                                  • combines intuition and scientific
              Down, dirty, quick                    approaches to analyze language




                 Linguists                                 Branches of Linguistics
• are not polyglots—do not study various          •   Phonetics (production of sounds)
  languages in order to speak them                •   Phonology (the use of sounds)
                                                  •   Morphology (word formation)
• are not translators
                                                  •   Syntax (sentence and phrase formation)
• are interested in areas including cognitive     •   Semantics (meaning)
  psychology, philosophy, logic, literature,      •   Pragmatics (effect of situation)
  computer science, and anthropology              •   Other
• describe and explain language and are not           – Theoretical Linguistics, Historical Linguistics,
                                                        Sociolinguistics, Psycholinguistics, Applied
  concerned with the prescriptive rules of              Linguistics, Computational Linguistics,
  the language (i.e., do not split infinitives)         Neurolinguistics, Anthropological Linguistics…




           Linguistics Circle                                          Phonetics
                                                  • study of the production and perception of
                                                    speech sounds
                                                  • concerned w/sounds of language, how these
                                                    sounds are articulated and how the hearer
                                                    perceives them.
                                                  • three sub-disciplines of phonetics:
                                                      – Articulatory Phonetics: the production of speech
                                                        sounds
                                                      – Acousitc Phonetics: the study of the physical
                                                        production and transmission of speech sounds
                                                      – Auditory Phonetics: the study of the perception of
                                                        speech sounds




                                                                                                             1
Phonology                             Lynn isn’t in love with phonology. . .
• study of the sound patterns of language
• concerned with how sounds are organized in a
  language
• examines
  – what occurs to speech sounds when they are
    combined to form a word
  – how these speech sounds interact with each other
• endeavors to explain what these phonological
  processes are in terms of formal rules.




                                                       Where/Why does [ ] rise across
. . .but some of it is important to AmE
                                                               the country?
• Not all varieties of a language have the
  same phonemic inventory:
  – Mary, merry, marry
  – cot, caught; tot, taught
• or, if they do have the same phonemic
  inventory, they don’t have the same
  allophonic alternations




                                                                  Simple Vowels
   Sounds into writing rules. . .                                   IPA Chart




                                                                                                2
It gets worse. . . .
                                                                     . . .see what I mean?
           simple English vowels




                   Morphology                                               Morphology
• studies word formation and structure                        • dog, dogs, bulldog
• Studies
    – how words are put together from their smaller parts
    – rules governing this process                            • walk, walks, walked, walking, moonwalk
• elements that are combining to form words are
  called morphemes
• morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning you                • red, reddish, redden, reddens, redder
  can have in a language
    – cats, for example, contains the morphemes cat and
      the plural -s




                   Morphemes                                     …or looked at another way
•   Dog       1 morpheme
•   Dogs      2 morphemes         dog + -s [pl]
•   Bulldog   2 morphemes         bull + dog
•   Walk      1 morpheme          walk
•   Walks     2 morphemes         walk + -s [3rd per sing.]
•   Walked    2 morphemes         walk = -ed [past tense]
•   Red       1 morpheme          red
•   Reddish   2 morphemes         red + -ish [deriv. adj]
•   Redder    2 morphemes         red + -er [comparative]




                                                                                                         3
Morphemes: base, root, free,
   Phonology vs. Morphology
                                                                          bound, inflectional, derivational. . .
                                                                         • Derivational              • Inflectional
           Phonemes                         Morphemes                      – change the meaning of      – do not change the
                                                                             a morpheme                   meaning
   /b/ + /e/ (2 phonemes)               /be/ = bay (1 morpheme)            – Change the part of         – Do not change the
                                                                             speech of a                  part of speech of a
                                                                             morpheme                     morpheme
                                        /pat/ + /s/ = pots (2
   /p/ + /a/ + /t/ + /s/ (4 phonemes)                                      – can be prefixes or         – strictly provide
                                        morphemes)
                                                                             suffixes                     grammatical
   /e/ (1 phoneme)                      /e/ = a (1 morpheme)                  • Prefix: un-, in-        – Always suffixes
                                                                              • Suffix: -ly, -ness
   /t/ + /i/ + /ch/ + /U/ + /r/ (5      /tich/ + /Ur/ = teacher (2
   phonemes)                            morphemes)




   Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                                              Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                                   inflectional morphemes
                                                                         • Go with verbs:
                                                                           – -s [3rd person singular, present tense]




   Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                                              Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                                   inflectional morphemes
• Go with verbs:                                                         • Go with verbs:
  – -s [3rd person singular, present tense]                     drinks     – -s [3rd person singular, present tense]     drinks
                                                                           – -ed [past tense]




                                                                                                                                  4
Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                             Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                  inflectional morphemes
• Go with verbs:                                        • Go with verbs:
  – -s [3rd person singular, present tense]   drinks      – -s [3rd person singular, present tense]   drinks
  – -ed [past tense]                          drank       – -ed [past tense]                          drank
                                                          – -ing [progressive]




   Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                             Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                  inflectional morphemes
• Go with verbs:                                        • Go with verbs:
  – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks        – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks
  – -ed [past tense]                           drank      – -ed [past tense]                           drank
  – -ing [progressive]                  [is] drinking     – -ing [progressive]                  [is] drinking
                                                          – -en [perfective participle]




   Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                             Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                  inflectional morphemes
• Go with verbs:                                        • Go with verbs:
  – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks        – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks
  – -ed [past tense]                           drank      – -ed [past tense]                           drank
  – -ing [progressive]                  [is] drinking     – -ing [progressive]                  [is] drinking
  – -en [perfective participle]         [has] drunk       – -en [perfective participle]         [has] drunk
                                                        • Go with adjectives:
                                                          – -er [comparative]




                                                                                                                5
Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                             Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                  inflectional morphemes
• Go with verbs:                                        • Go with verbs:
  – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks        – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks
  – -ed [past tense]                           drank      – -ed [past tense]                           drank
  – -ing [progressive]                  [is] drinking     – -ing [progressive]                  [is] drinking
  – -en [perfective participle]         [has] drunk       – -en [perfective participle]         [has] drunk
• Go with adjectives:                                   • Go with adjectives:
  – -er [comparative]                      bloodier       – -er [comparative]                      bloodier
                                                          – -est [superlative]




   Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                             Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                  inflectional morphemes
• Go with verbs:                                        • Go with nouns:
  – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks        – -s [plural]
  – -ed [past tense]                           drank
  – -ing [progressive]                  [is] drinking
  – -en [perfective participle]         [has] drunk
• Go with adjectives:
  – -er [comparative]                     bloodier
  – -est [superlative]                    bloodiest




   Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                             Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                  inflectional morphemes
• Go with nouns:                                        • Go with nouns:
  – -s [plural]                           vampires        – -s [plural]                           vampires
                                                          – -’(s) [possessive]




                                                                                                                6
Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                                        Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                             inflectional morphemes
• Go with nouns:                                                  • Go with nouns:
  – -s [plural]                                       vampires       – -s [plural]                                          vampires
  – -’(s) [possessive]                                vampire’s      – -’(s) [possessive]                                   vampire’s
                                                                     – ‘s’ [plural possessive]




   Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9                                        Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9
      inflectional morphemes                                             inflectional morphemes
• Go with nouns:                                                  • Go with verbs:
                                                                     –   -s [3rd person singular, present tense]                   drinks
  – -s [plural]                                       vampires       –   -ed [past tense]                                           drank
                                                                     –   -ing [progressive]                                  [is] drinking
  – -’(s) [possessive]                                vampire’s
                                                                     –   -en [perfective participle]                         [has] drunk
  – -s’ [plural possessive]                           vampires’   • Go with adjectives:
                                                                     – -er [comparative]                                       bloodier
                                                                     – -est [superlative]                                     bloodiest
                                                                  • Go with nouns:
                                                                     – -s [plural]                                             vampires
                                                                     – -’(s) [possessive]                                     vampire’s
                                                                     – ‘s’ [plural possessive]                                 vampires’




 Put another way: Mod AmE Verbs                                   Derivational? Too many to list…
                                                                  • Change meaning                        • Change part of speech:
                                                                     – Re-                                   – picture (N) + esque =
                                 Verbs                                    • reorganize, restate,               picturesque (ADJ)
                                                                            remark, reconvene,               – sing (V) + er = singer (N)
                       Regular                       Irregular              repaint, retry, return. . .
                                                                                                             – quiet (ADJ) + ly = quietly
                                                                     – -ness                                   (ADV)
        Add regular endings:             Add some endings,                • creativeness, laziness,
                                                                                                             – vaccine (N) + ate =
   -s present, 3rd person singular        Change vowels                     expressiveness,
                                                                            courtliness…
                                                                                                               vaccinate (V)
           -ed past tens                    Stay regular
                                                                     – Un-                                   – tall (ADJ) + ness = tallness
                                                                                                               (N)
                          love                          be                • undo, unpaid,
                         laugh                         sing                 unadverturous,                   – migrate (V) + ory =
                         smile                         write                unadvisedly,unaerated,             migratory (ADJ)
                                                                            unaffected…




                                                                                                                                              7
Put this much together and you
    Phonology vs. Morphology                                               have….syllable and word!

           Phonemes                         Morphemes
                                                                     • Syllable: organized sequence of sounds
   /b/ + /e/ (2 phonemes)               /be/ = bay (1 morpheme)
                                                                     • Word: [hard one!] unit of language, mostly
                                        /pat/ + /s/ = pots (2          w/meaning and morphemes
   /p/ + /a/ + /t/ + /s/ (4 phonemes)
                                        morphemes)

   /e/ (1 phoneme)                      /e/ = a (1 morpheme)

   /t/ + /i/ + /ch/ + /U/ + /r/ (5      /tich/ + /Ur/ = teacher (2
   phonemes)                            morphemes)




                 Word Formation                                                 Word Formation
fan (fanatic)                                                        NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Agency)
                                                                     TESOL (Teachers of English as a Second
lab (laboratory)                                                       Language)
fax (facsimile)                                                      AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome)
                                                                     ASAP
phone (telephone)

                                                                        Acronyms: creating a word from initials

 Clipping: reducing a word to one of its
                  parts




                 Word Formation                                                 Word Formation
edit   editor                                                        Xerox
                                                                     Kleenex
peddle    peddler
                                                                     Band-aid
enthuse     enthusiasm                                               Sandwich
shevelled     dishevelled (Bill Bryson’s word)


     Back Formation: new form from                                      Eponyms: derived from proper name of a
        removing prefixes/suffixes                                                  person or place




                                                                                                                    8
Word Formation                                  Word Formation
motel = motor + hotel                          petite, genre (from French)
smog = smoke + fog                             karaoke (from Japanese)
brunch = breakfast + lunch                     tea, tofu (from Chinese)
camcorder = camera + recorder                  salsa (from. . .guess where?)




 Blending: formed from parts of other words      Borrowing: aka: we don’t have the word so
              squished together                               we’ll just steal it




  Syntax (Lynn likes this area)                 Underlying? Transformational?
• study of sentence structure                  • underlying structure of English for example
• attempts to describe what is grammatical       would have a subject-verb-object sentence
                                                 order
  in a particular language in term of rules
                                                 – S V [O]
• rules detail an underlying structure and a     – John hit the ball
  transformational process                     • transformational process would allow an
                                                 alteration of the word order
                                                 – could have something like The ball was hit by
                                                   John




 Sentence: The students attended
                                                 Syntax gets interesting when
              class
                                               • Start using it for practical purposes such as
                                                 natural language generation
                                               • Attribute-Value Grammar tree for Mary chased
                                                 John.




                                                                                                   9
Put this much together and you
        have….clause and phrase!
                                                                                  Semantics
• Clause: unit of language w/subject and                       • study of meaning (loaded statement!)
  verb marked for tense                                        • concerned with describing
• Phrase: unit of language similar to clause                     – how we represent the meaning of a word in
  but lacking either subject, verb, or tense                       our mind
  marker                                                         – how we use this representation in
                                                                   constructing sentences
                                                               • based largely on the study of logic in
                                                                 philosophy




    Pragmatics & Speech Acts                                    Lynn really likes pragmatics…
• study of the ability of natural language                     • Pragmatics depends on
  speakers to communicate more than that                         – the speaker
  which is explicitly stated                                     – the addressee
                                                                 – other features of the context of utterance,
• includes social uses of language:
                                                                   such as the following:
   – eye contact, turn taking in conversation, use                  • effect that the following have on the speaker’s
     of appropriate words in social conversation,                     choice of expression and the addressee’s
     taking the perspective of the listener,                          interpretation of an utterance:
                                                                       – Context of utterance
     understanding and appropriately using body                        – Generally observed principles of communication
     language and expressions                                          – The goals of the speaker




Pragmatics depends on implicature                              H. P. Grice & Cooperative Principle
• refers to what is suggested in an utterance, even            • quot;Make your contribution such as it is
  though not expressed nor strictly implied (that is,
  entailed) by the utterance.
                                                                 required, at the stage at which it occurs,
   – quot;Mary had a baby and got married“                           by the accepted purpose or direction of the
   – strongly suggests that Mary had the baby before the         talk exchange in which you are engaged.quot;
     wedding
   – …but would still be strictly true if Mary had her baby
     after she got married.                                    • cooperative principle describes—doesn’t
   – Further, if we add the qualification quot;— not necessarily
     in that orderquot; to the original sentence, then the
                                                                 prescribe—how people interact with one
     implicature is cancelled even though the meaning of         another
     the original sentence is not altered.




                                                                                                                          10
H. P. Grice & Maxims                                         Pragmatics rather like Rhetoric
• Maxim of Quality—Truth                                               • Language             • Language used to
  – Do not say what you believe to be false.
  – Do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence.                intentionally used     persuade people
• Maxim of Quantity—Information                                        • Concerned w/spoken   • Classically concerned
  – Make your contribution as informative as is required for the
    current purposes of the exchange.                                    language               w/spoken language
  – Do not make your contribution more informative than is required.
                                                                       • Concerned w/speech   • Concerned w/
• Maxim of Relation—Relevance
  – Be relevant.                                                         acts:                  – Invention, delivery,
• Maxim of Manner—Clarity                                                – convince, judge,       arrangement, style,
  –   Avoid obscurity of expression. (quot;Eschew obfuscationquot;)                defend. . .            memory
  –   Avoid ambiguity. (quot;Espouse elucidationquot;)
  –   Be brief. (quot;Avoid unnecessary prolixityquot;)                        • Descriptive          • Prescriptive
  –   Be orderly.




   Another quickie comparison
• Pragmatics                        • Rhetoric
  – Boast, celebrate,                   – Ethos: purpose is to
    praise                                make the hearer trust
                                          speaker
  – argue, motivate,                    – Logos: purpose is to
    exemplify                             use argument to
                                          persuade
  – disparage, belittle,                – Pathos: purpose is to
    praise, accuse, annoy                 stir emotions




                                                                                                                         11

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Introduction Linguistics

  • 1. Linguistics • is systematic study of human language • lies at the crossroads of the humanities Introduction to Linguistics and the social sciences • combines intuition and scientific Down, dirty, quick approaches to analyze language Linguists Branches of Linguistics • are not polyglots—do not study various • Phonetics (production of sounds) languages in order to speak them • Phonology (the use of sounds) • Morphology (word formation) • are not translators • Syntax (sentence and phrase formation) • are interested in areas including cognitive • Semantics (meaning) psychology, philosophy, logic, literature, • Pragmatics (effect of situation) computer science, and anthropology • Other • describe and explain language and are not – Theoretical Linguistics, Historical Linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Psycholinguistics, Applied concerned with the prescriptive rules of Linguistics, Computational Linguistics, the language (i.e., do not split infinitives) Neurolinguistics, Anthropological Linguistics… Linguistics Circle Phonetics • study of the production and perception of speech sounds • concerned w/sounds of language, how these sounds are articulated and how the hearer perceives them. • three sub-disciplines of phonetics: – Articulatory Phonetics: the production of speech sounds – Acousitc Phonetics: the study of the physical production and transmission of speech sounds – Auditory Phonetics: the study of the perception of speech sounds 1
  • 2. Phonology Lynn isn’t in love with phonology. . . • study of the sound patterns of language • concerned with how sounds are organized in a language • examines – what occurs to speech sounds when they are combined to form a word – how these speech sounds interact with each other • endeavors to explain what these phonological processes are in terms of formal rules. Where/Why does [ ] rise across . . .but some of it is important to AmE the country? • Not all varieties of a language have the same phonemic inventory: – Mary, merry, marry – cot, caught; tot, taught • or, if they do have the same phonemic inventory, they don’t have the same allophonic alternations Simple Vowels Sounds into writing rules. . . IPA Chart 2
  • 3. It gets worse. . . . . . .see what I mean? simple English vowels Morphology Morphology • studies word formation and structure • dog, dogs, bulldog • Studies – how words are put together from their smaller parts – rules governing this process • walk, walks, walked, walking, moonwalk • elements that are combining to form words are called morphemes • morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning you • red, reddish, redden, reddens, redder can have in a language – cats, for example, contains the morphemes cat and the plural -s Morphemes …or looked at another way • Dog 1 morpheme • Dogs 2 morphemes dog + -s [pl] • Bulldog 2 morphemes bull + dog • Walk 1 morpheme walk • Walks 2 morphemes walk + -s [3rd per sing.] • Walked 2 morphemes walk = -ed [past tense] • Red 1 morpheme red • Reddish 2 morphemes red + -ish [deriv. adj] • Redder 2 morphemes red + -er [comparative] 3
  • 4. Morphemes: base, root, free, Phonology vs. Morphology bound, inflectional, derivational. . . • Derivational • Inflectional Phonemes Morphemes – change the meaning of – do not change the a morpheme meaning /b/ + /e/ (2 phonemes) /be/ = bay (1 morpheme) – Change the part of – Do not change the speech of a part of speech of a morpheme morpheme /pat/ + /s/ = pots (2 /p/ + /a/ + /t/ + /s/ (4 phonemes) – can be prefixes or – strictly provide morphemes) suffixes grammatical /e/ (1 phoneme) /e/ = a (1 morpheme) • Prefix: un-, in- – Always suffixes • Suffix: -ly, -ness /t/ + /i/ + /ch/ + /U/ + /r/ (5 /tich/ + /Ur/ = teacher (2 phonemes) morphemes) Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with verbs: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with verbs: • Go with verbs: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -ed [past tense] 4
  • 5. Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with verbs: • Go with verbs: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -ed [past tense] drank – -ed [past tense] drank – -ing [progressive] Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with verbs: • Go with verbs: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -ed [past tense] drank – -ed [past tense] drank – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -en [perfective participle] Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with verbs: • Go with verbs: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -ed [past tense] drank – -ed [past tense] drank – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -en [perfective participle] [has] drunk – -en [perfective participle] [has] drunk • Go with adjectives: – -er [comparative] 5
  • 6. Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with verbs: • Go with verbs: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -ed [past tense] drank – -ed [past tense] drank – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -en [perfective participle] [has] drunk – -en [perfective participle] [has] drunk • Go with adjectives: • Go with adjectives: – -er [comparative] bloodier – -er [comparative] bloodier – -est [superlative] Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with verbs: • Go with nouns: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -s [plural] – -ed [past tense] drank – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -en [perfective participle] [has] drunk • Go with adjectives: – -er [comparative] bloodier – -est [superlative] bloodiest Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with nouns: • Go with nouns: – -s [plural] vampires – -s [plural] vampires – -’(s) [possessive] 6
  • 7. Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with nouns: • Go with nouns: – -s [plural] vampires – -s [plural] vampires – -’(s) [possessive] vampire’s – -’(s) [possessive] vampire’s – ‘s’ [plural possessive] Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 Contemporary AmE has 8 or 9 inflectional morphemes inflectional morphemes • Go with nouns: • Go with verbs: – -s [3rd person singular, present tense] drinks – -s [plural] vampires – -ed [past tense] drank – -ing [progressive] [is] drinking – -’(s) [possessive] vampire’s – -en [perfective participle] [has] drunk – -s’ [plural possessive] vampires’ • Go with adjectives: – -er [comparative] bloodier – -est [superlative] bloodiest • Go with nouns: – -s [plural] vampires – -’(s) [possessive] vampire’s – ‘s’ [plural possessive] vampires’ Put another way: Mod AmE Verbs Derivational? Too many to list… • Change meaning • Change part of speech: – Re- – picture (N) + esque = Verbs • reorganize, restate, picturesque (ADJ) remark, reconvene, – sing (V) + er = singer (N) Regular Irregular repaint, retry, return. . . – quiet (ADJ) + ly = quietly – -ness (ADV) Add regular endings: Add some endings, • creativeness, laziness, – vaccine (N) + ate = -s present, 3rd person singular Change vowels expressiveness, courtliness… vaccinate (V) -ed past tens Stay regular – Un- – tall (ADJ) + ness = tallness (N) love be • undo, unpaid, laugh sing unadverturous, – migrate (V) + ory = smile write unadvisedly,unaerated, migratory (ADJ) unaffected… 7
  • 8. Put this much together and you Phonology vs. Morphology have….syllable and word! Phonemes Morphemes • Syllable: organized sequence of sounds /b/ + /e/ (2 phonemes) /be/ = bay (1 morpheme) • Word: [hard one!] unit of language, mostly /pat/ + /s/ = pots (2 w/meaning and morphemes /p/ + /a/ + /t/ + /s/ (4 phonemes) morphemes) /e/ (1 phoneme) /e/ = a (1 morpheme) /t/ + /i/ + /ch/ + /U/ + /r/ (5 /tich/ + /Ur/ = teacher (2 phonemes) morphemes) Word Formation Word Formation fan (fanatic) NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Agency) TESOL (Teachers of English as a Second lab (laboratory) Language) fax (facsimile) AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) ASAP phone (telephone) Acronyms: creating a word from initials Clipping: reducing a word to one of its parts Word Formation Word Formation edit editor Xerox Kleenex peddle peddler Band-aid enthuse enthusiasm Sandwich shevelled dishevelled (Bill Bryson’s word) Back Formation: new form from Eponyms: derived from proper name of a removing prefixes/suffixes person or place 8
  • 9. Word Formation Word Formation motel = motor + hotel petite, genre (from French) smog = smoke + fog karaoke (from Japanese) brunch = breakfast + lunch tea, tofu (from Chinese) camcorder = camera + recorder salsa (from. . .guess where?) Blending: formed from parts of other words Borrowing: aka: we don’t have the word so squished together we’ll just steal it Syntax (Lynn likes this area) Underlying? Transformational? • study of sentence structure • underlying structure of English for example • attempts to describe what is grammatical would have a subject-verb-object sentence order in a particular language in term of rules – S V [O] • rules detail an underlying structure and a – John hit the ball transformational process • transformational process would allow an alteration of the word order – could have something like The ball was hit by John Sentence: The students attended Syntax gets interesting when class • Start using it for practical purposes such as natural language generation • Attribute-Value Grammar tree for Mary chased John. 9
  • 10. Put this much together and you have….clause and phrase! Semantics • Clause: unit of language w/subject and • study of meaning (loaded statement!) verb marked for tense • concerned with describing • Phrase: unit of language similar to clause – how we represent the meaning of a word in but lacking either subject, verb, or tense our mind marker – how we use this representation in constructing sentences • based largely on the study of logic in philosophy Pragmatics & Speech Acts Lynn really likes pragmatics… • study of the ability of natural language • Pragmatics depends on speakers to communicate more than that – the speaker which is explicitly stated – the addressee – other features of the context of utterance, • includes social uses of language: such as the following: – eye contact, turn taking in conversation, use • effect that the following have on the speaker’s of appropriate words in social conversation, choice of expression and the addressee’s taking the perspective of the listener, interpretation of an utterance: – Context of utterance understanding and appropriately using body – Generally observed principles of communication language and expressions – The goals of the speaker Pragmatics depends on implicature H. P. Grice & Cooperative Principle • refers to what is suggested in an utterance, even • quot;Make your contribution such as it is though not expressed nor strictly implied (that is, entailed) by the utterance. required, at the stage at which it occurs, – quot;Mary had a baby and got married“ by the accepted purpose or direction of the – strongly suggests that Mary had the baby before the talk exchange in which you are engaged.quot; wedding – …but would still be strictly true if Mary had her baby after she got married. • cooperative principle describes—doesn’t – Further, if we add the qualification quot;— not necessarily in that orderquot; to the original sentence, then the prescribe—how people interact with one implicature is cancelled even though the meaning of another the original sentence is not altered. 10
  • 11. H. P. Grice & Maxims Pragmatics rather like Rhetoric • Maxim of Quality—Truth • Language • Language used to – Do not say what you believe to be false. – Do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence. intentionally used persuade people • Maxim of Quantity—Information • Concerned w/spoken • Classically concerned – Make your contribution as informative as is required for the current purposes of the exchange. language w/spoken language – Do not make your contribution more informative than is required. • Concerned w/speech • Concerned w/ • Maxim of Relation—Relevance – Be relevant. acts: – Invention, delivery, • Maxim of Manner—Clarity – convince, judge, arrangement, style, – Avoid obscurity of expression. (quot;Eschew obfuscationquot;) defend. . . memory – Avoid ambiguity. (quot;Espouse elucidationquot;) – Be brief. (quot;Avoid unnecessary prolixityquot;) • Descriptive • Prescriptive – Be orderly. Another quickie comparison • Pragmatics • Rhetoric – Boast, celebrate, – Ethos: purpose is to praise make the hearer trust speaker – argue, motivate, – Logos: purpose is to exemplify use argument to persuade – disparage, belittle, – Pathos: purpose is to praise, accuse, annoy stir emotions 11