Language and LinguisticsThis 1981 book is a general introduction to linguistics and the study of language, intended particularly for beginning students and readers with no previous knowledge or training in the subject. There is first a general account of the nature of language and of the aims, methods and basic principles of linguistic theory. John Lyons then introduces in turn each of the main sub-fields of linguistics: the sounds of language, grammar, semantics, language change, psycholinguistics: the sounds of language, grammar, semantics, language change, psycholinguistics, language and culture. Throughout the book he emphasizes particularly those aspects of the discipline that seem fundamental and most likely to remain important. He stresses throughout the cultural at least as much as the biological context of human language, and shows how the linguist's concerns connect productively with those of the traditional humanities and the social sciences. Each chapter has a wide-ranging set of discussion questions and revision exercises, and extensive suggestions for further reading. The exposition is marked throughout by the author's characteristic clarity, balance and authority. |
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... speech 1.5 Thesemiotic point of view 1.6 The fictionof homogeneity 1.7 There are no primitivelanguages Further ... sounds of language 3.1 The phonic medium 3.2 Phonetic andorthographic representation 3.3 Articulatory phonetics 3.4 ...
... speech 1.5 Thesemiotic point of view 1.6 The fictionof homogeneity 1.7 There are no primitivelanguages Further ... sounds of language 3.1 The phonic medium 3.2 Phonetic andorthographic representation 3.3 Articulatory phonetics 3.4 ...
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... sounds.Not all combinations of letters are acceptable;nor areallcombinations of sounds.But there is an ... speech only in situations which make vocal–auditory communication impossible, unreliable or inefficient. And the invention of the.
... sounds.Not all combinations of letters are acceptable;nor areallcombinations of sounds.But there is an ... speech only in situations which make vocal–auditory communication impossible, unreliable or inefficient. And the invention of the.
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... speech sounds. It has often beenpointed out thatwhat the linguist commonlyrefers to asthe speechorgans (or vocal organs)– the lungs, the vocal cords, the teeth, the tongue, etc.–allserve some biologically more basic function than that ...
... speech sounds. It has often beenpointed out thatwhat the linguist commonlyrefers to asthe speechorgans (or vocal organs)– the lungs, the vocal cords, the teeth, the tongue, etc.–allserve some biologically more basic function than that ...
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accepted allophones andthe articulatory articulatory phonetics asthe behaviour bilingualism bythe canbe cardinal vowels chapter Chomsky Chomsky’s colourterms concerned consonants construction context culture deixis descriptive descriptive linguistics determined dialect diglossia distinction example expressions fact forms French function generativism German grammatical structure historical historical linguistics hypothesis important inthe itis kind language languageacquisition languagebehaviour languagechange languagecommunity languagesystem Latin lexemes lexical literary meaning morphemes natural languages Neogrammarians non nonstandard normally notion noun oflanguage ofthe onthe particular languages philosophers phonetic phonological place of articulation polysemy Prague School principle psycholinguistics psychology question reference relation relevant respect rules semantics sense sentences socalled social sociolinguistics speakers speech speechsounds spoken language Standard English stylistic suprasegmental synchronic synonymy syntactic syntax thatthe theoretical theory thereare thereis thesame theterm theyare Thisis tobe tothe traditional grammar traditionally transformational grammar truthconditions utterances verbs vocabulary voiceless vowels wellformed whatis withthe wordforms words