Title: Review of chapters 1, 2, part of chapter 3, 15, and 16
1Mid-term exam
- Review of chapters 1, 2, part of chapter 3, 15,
and 16
2Anatomy of a mid-term exam
- 40 questions worth 0.5 points each (total of 20
points).
- 20 questions worth 0.5 points each (total 10
points).
- The mid-term is worth 25 of the final grade.
3Chapter 1
4Why study language?
- social/cultural/ethnic institution etc.
- Language is everywhere in our lives
- Because its everywhere, and because its so
important, we (at least some of us) feel
compelled to know how it works
- The discipline that studies language is called
5Different kinds of linguistics
- Descriptive linguistics
- Studies the structure of specific languages
(Finnish, French, Chinese, etc.)
6Different kinds of linguistics
- Neurolinguistics
- Explores the location and organization of
language in the brain tissue
- Historical linguistics
- Studies how language changes through time
- Anthropological lingusitics
- Studies the role of language in cultural
behaviours and practices
- Computational linguistics
- works on the interface between language and
machine
7Study language for what purpose?
- What can we do with what we find about language?
- make grammars to help us teach and learn
languages
- help us help people with language disorders
- design text-to-speech software
Natural Reader
- design automatic speech recognition software
- design automatic text summarization programs
- help in artificial intelligence research
- satisfy our curiosity ( pure science)
8Summing up chpater 1
- Parts of our body, including our brain, have
specialized for language
- We have a system that allows us to produce and
understand language ( grammar)
- The grammar of a language is both idiomatic
(fixed) and creative
- All languages have a grammar
- All grammars are equal (no good or bad ones)
- All grammars are similar in some basic way
- All grammars change over time
- Knowledge of grammar is subconscious.
9Chapter 16
10Communication structure The study of signs
11Types of signs
- Iconic signs
- Bear some resemblance to their referent.
12Types of signs
- Fulfills its function by pointing out its
referent
- There is a causal link between an indexal sign
and its referent
- Are not deliberately selected for purposes of
communication.
13Types of signs
- Bear an arbitrary relationship to their referents
Human language is highly symbolic.
14Summing up chapter 16
- Human language is one communication system among
the many that life forms on this planet employ
- Communication can be described with reference the
sign
- A sign has a signifier and a signified
- Signs can be iconic, indexal, or symbolic
- Experiments with non-human primates have created
controversy over whether they have shown symbolic
behaviour and a capacity for linguistic behaviour
- Many researchers have dismissed the work as an
example of dressage or the Clever Hans phenomenon.
15Summing up chapter 16
- Human language and systems of animal
communication share certain design features
- Humans lack many communicative skills that
animals possess - we cannot follow scent trails
- we cannot change colour for communication
purposes - we are not as gifted as horses for example at
assessing and interpreting subtle body gestures
- Humans, however, possess an ability to symbolize
which far exceeds that of animals and insects
- Humans language also is more flexible and
productive in manipulating these symbols.
16Chapter 15
17 Types of writing
- Logographic writing
- A type of writing in which symbols represent part
of words or even the entire word ( logograms) - For example
- Ancient Mesopotamian cuneiform inscriptions
- Primordial Chinese characters
- Conventional abbreviations such as , , , and _at_
- Arabic numerals such as 1, 2, 10, 159, etc.
- They can, in principle, be read independently of
its language of origin.
18Types of writing
- Phonographic writing
- A type of writing in which symbols represent
syllables or segments
- Employ signs to represent syllables
- A set of syllabic signs is called a syllabary.
19Types of writing
record
- Alphabetic writing systems
- Employ signs to represent segments such as
consonants (e.g., p, t, k) and vowels (e.g., a,
e, u)
- A set of phonetic signs is called a alphabet
- Graphemes (i.e., symbols) can correspond to one
or many sounds
f
One of the earliest (if not the very first)
phonemic scripts
20Rebuses and the emergence of writing
- Phonographic writing made its appearance around
3000 BC
- Now, concepts that could not be directly depicted
by a picture could be represented in writing
- Symbols represented sound rather than meaning
- This was made possible by the use of the rebus
principle
21A quick review of the evolution of the alphabet
From Phoenicians to todays alphabet
22English orthography Irregularity
- The relationship between symbol and sound was not
always so irregular
i
hid
hide
Symbol
Sound
Sound
i
hid
Symbol
hide
23Summing up chapter 15
Pictographic
- Writing has first developed from pictographic to
logographic writing
Logographic
- Then, from logograms, writing has developed into
syllabic writing
Syllabic
- And finally syllabic writing has developed to
aphabetic writing
alphabetic
- Many of the writing systems found throughout the
modern world directly or indirectly come from
Semitic writing systems such as Cuneiform
- In any case, a later writing system has never
developed into an earlier one
alphabetic
Syllabic
- Last but not least, no forms of writing are
inferior to alphabetic writing or any other.
24Chapter 2
- Phonetics and phonology Understanding the sounds
of speech
25Summing up chapter 2
- Phonetics deals with the measurable physical
characteristics of sounds
- Phonology deals with the mental representation of
these sounds
- The auditory cortex deals with sounds The faster
left hemisphere mainly deals with sound used
linguistically while the slower right hemisphere
mainly deals with sound used non-linguistically
- Different sounds are categorized according to
place of articulation ( where in the mouth and
throat) and manner of articulation ( complete
obstruction to complete openess)
- The IPA comprises of graphemes that have a
one-to-one correspondance with the sound they
represent.
26Summing up chapter 2
- When doing phonetic and phonological analysis, we
use the phonetic transcription, which is enclosed
in
- We deal with variation in production of sounds
(and of pretty much anything else as well) by
making categories
- Sound ( phones) are categorized into phonemes,
which are enclosed in / /
- The syllable is a unit of organization of a sound
sequence
- There are three types of allophonic variations
phonemic variation, free variation, and
complementary distribution
- A phonological system is composed of a set of
vocalic and consonantic sounds, allophonic
variations, and a set of sound combination rules
(also called phonotactics)
27Chapter 3
- Morphology The analysis of word structure
28Summing up chapter 3
- Morphology deals with the formation of words
- Words and parts of words are stored in our mental
lexicon
- Morphology stipulates rules that define how words
and parts of words combine together
- It is probable that the meaning inhibitor
component of language is nested in cerebral
tissue in Wernickes area
- A word is the smallest free form found in
language
- A free form is an element that can occur on its
own and is not fixed relative to its neighbours
- Morphemes are the smallest unit of language
carrying information about meaning or function
(they are signs)
- Morphemes are also mental categories, similarly
to phonemes
29Summing up chapter 3
- There are two types of morphemes
- Bound morphemes morphemes that CANNOT occur on
their own
- Free morphemes morphemes that CAN occur on
their own
- Allomorphs variants of a morpheme
- Nouns refer to concrete and abstract things
- Verbs denote actions and states
- Adjectives name properties
- Prepositions encode spatial relations
30Summing up chapter 3
- There are three types of affixes ( bound
derivational morpheme)
- Prefixes attaches before the base
- Infixes is inserted within the base
- Suffixes attaches after the base
- Base the form to which an affix added
- Root the core of the word, which carries the
major component of its meaning
31Some sample questions
32Section 1 Short answers
- How are pictographic and phonographic writing
different?
Pictographic writing represents meaning whereas
phonographic writing represents sound.
- Aside from the Great Vowel Shift, name one reason
why modern Engish orthography is so irregular.
The norman invasion the introduction of French
and Latin conventions spelling words according
to their ethymological origins.
33Section 1 Short answers
- Phonographic writing encompases two sub-types of
writing. What are they?
Syllabic and alphabetic.
Relative emphasis that may be given to certain
syllables in a word.
34Section 1 Short answers
- Name the two types of morphemes.
Bound and free morphemes.
- Why is cuneiform writing called cuneiform?
Because it was produced with a wedge-shaped
instrument.
35Section 1 Short answers
- Name 4 of the 6 universals of language.
Idiomaticity creativity, grammar, equality,
similarity, change, and subconscious.
- What is linguistic competence?
It is the ability to understand and produce an
infinite number of sentences and to know that
some sentences are unacceptable.
36Section 1 Short answers
It is a sign that is unwillingly produced that
"points to" its referent (it is symptomatic).
- Give an example of a discrete sign.
The words "start" and "go" the digital display
of whatches traffic lights etc.
37Section 1 Short answers
- Which animal/insect communication system most
resembles our own?
Non-human primates.
- What does the term phonation refer to?
Voiced and unvoiced.
38Section 1 Short answers
- What are the possible types of syllables?
N, NC, ON, ONC (simple complex)
- What things in a language's grammar change
quickly?
Words.
39Section 1 Short answers
It is a sign that bears resemblance to its
referent.
It is a sign that is unwillingly produced, that
"points to" its referent (it is symptomatic).
40Section 1 Short answers
- Give an example of an iconic sign.
The picture of a chimp a recycle symbol
onomatopeia etc.
- Name three different sub-disciplines (kinds of)
of linguistics.
Theoretical linguistics sociolinguistics
descriptive linguistics psycholinguistics
neurolinguistics historical linguistics
anthropological linguistics computational
linguistics.
41Section 1 Short answers
- Who were the first to devise an alphabet?
The Phoenicians
- Name two things that all languages have in common.
More consonants than vowels phonetics
phonology morphology syntax semantics most
languages have the SVO word order.
42Section 2 Practicum
- Given the following syllabic inventory N (simple
complex), ON (simple O, simple complex N),
and ONC (simple O, simple complex N, simple
complex C), how would you syllabify the following
sequence?
43Section 2 Practicum
- 2) Given the following vocalic and consonantic
inventory, and the following two (2) phonological
rules, what is the phonetic output of the words
in (i)-(v)
Vocalic consonantic inventory /p/ p, /ph/
ph, /t/ t /th/ th, /k/ k g, /kh/
kh, /i/ i y, /e/ \
Phonological rules /i/ ? i / un-aspirated
plosive ___ (C) /i/ ? y / elsewhere /k/ ? k /
___NC /k/ ? g / elsewhere
(i) /pi/ (ii) /thi/ (iii)
/kin/ (iv) /phek/ (v) /ke/
pi thy kin pheg ge
44Thats it
- See you Monday and good luck on your mid-term!