talking about language Flashcards
types of arrangement
- patterns of sound (spoken language)
- patterns of visual marks (written language)
- patterns of hand positions (sign language)
- patterns of meaning
Charles Hocket: duality of patterning
purpose: communication:
- communicating information
- social interaction
linguistics
- study of language and languages
- arrangements or structures in both parts are complex:
- the sounds, visual patterns, hand position
- the meanings
- the relations between them allow languages to express meaning
- these relations are arbitrary - random
De Saussure
signifier —> sign —> signified
d-o-g —> ‘dog’ —> dogs
- the connection between signifier and signified is fundamentally arbitrary, and different in different languages
non-arbitrariness
- slime, slip, slides
- gleam, glitter, glamour
similar word starting and similar meanings
concept and word - connection
Blasi et al - pattern in certain sound-meaning connections across thousands of languages:
small and ‘i;i
full and ‘p’ or ‘b’
Imai et al: children learn sound-symbolic verbs more easily
Klink: sound symbolism in brand names - use sounds to reflect product features
ketchup Nidax vs Nodax
linguistics - sub-branches
- sounds
- sound patterns
- structure of phrases and sentences
- structure of phrases and sentences
- indirect and direct meaning
- style
- letters
- patterns of letters
speech sounds
- different tpes of sounds that humans make - coughs, whistles, etc
phones - the sounds of speech
phonemes - groups of phones that are equivalent in a language, even though they are not the exact same sound e.g. /p/ in pin vs /p/ in spin
phonology: sound patterns
written language
- derived from and dependent upon spoken language
- written or marks on paper, computer screen etc
- letters corresponding to phonemes
- rules for what strong of letter punctuation
sign language
- sign languages also have signs that can vary in their exact form from occasion to occasion
- but clear contrasts between one sign and another
- as well as basic word type signs: ASL and BSL have systems of finger spelling as an interface between sign language and written language
BUT sign languages are fully-fledged languages in their own write, different to the spoken languages around them