Chapter 2 Flashcards
communicative signals
behaviors used intentionally to provide information
glossolalia
also known as “speaking in tongues”,
the production of sounds and syllables in a stream of speech that seems to have no communicative purpose (e.g. chirping and singing of birds)
informative signals
behaviors that provide information, usually unintentionally (e.g. sneezing)
reflexivity
a special property of human language that allows language to be used to think and talk about language itself
arbitrariness
a property of language describing the fact that there is no natural connection between a linguistic form and its meaning
displacement
a property of language that allows users to talk about things and events not present in the immediate environment (e.g. Santa Claus, fairies)
productivity
a property of language that allows users to create new expressions, also called “creativity” or “open-endedness”
cultural transmission
the process whereby knowledge of a language is passed from one generation to the next
fixed reference
a property of a communication system whereby each signal is fixed as relating to one particular object or occasion (e.g. scent-based signaling)
duality
a property of language whereby linguistic forms have two simultaneous levels of sound production and meaning, also called “double articulation” (e.g. bin and nib)
recursion
the repeated application of a rule in generating structures