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Language and Culture

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Title: Language and Culture


1
Language and Culture
2
Language
  • System of human communication utilizing arbitrary
    vocal (or visual) symbols for the exchange of
    information.
  • Minimal linguistic event involves
  • two human beings with
  • healthy auditory (or visual) systems (receiver),
  • healthy vocal (or visual) systems (transmitter),
    and
  • healthy nervous systems connecting 2 and 3 to
  • healthy brains
  • a physical link between the two humans
  • a shared grammar (encoder/decoder), located in
    the left hemispheres of their brains.

3
WHY IS LANGUAGE IMPORTANT ?
  • Allows the communication of complex and abstract
    concepts.
  • Provides a means by which customs, norms, and
    important information can be passed between
    generations and preserved.
  • The process of language acquisition forms the way
    we think
  • Language is the vehicle of culture.

4
Linguistic Anthropology
  • Devoted to the study of human communication
  • Study of non-Western languages
  • Relationship between nationalism and language
  • Role of language in mass media
  • Applying research to improved language learning

5
Origins of Language
  • Many primates communicate using calls, body
    postures and gestures
  • Modern verbal language developed by 50,000 years
    ago, perhaps earlier
  • Emergence of writing associated with emergence of
    the state.

6
SEMANTIC UNIVERSALITY
  • Humans are able to convey information relevant to
    all aspects of experience and thought.
  • All human languages share the same fundamental
    properties.

7
Semantic Universality is achieved due to three
basic aspects of language
  • PRODUCTIVITY
  • The capacity to create an infinite number of new
    messages with any level of detail.
  • DISPLACEMENT
  • The ability to send or receive a message without
    direct sensory contact with the conditions or
    events to which the message refers. (Abstract
    concepts)
  • ARBITRARINESS
  • The symbols of language can be completely
    arbitrary. They do not have to resemble or mimic
    any aspect of what they are representing. This
    allows for the great diversity of languages and
    symbols.

8
Linguistics The discipline which studies
language structure (grammar).
  • Linguistics is descriptive, and describes the way
    people talk not the way they should talk.
  • Structural linguistics breaks down language into
    hierarchical levels of structure, from broader to
    smaller categories.

9
ELEMENTS OF LANGUAGE ANALYSIS
  • All human languages are composed of, or can be
    described in terms of, the same basic elements.

10
Grammar
  • The rules that govern the structure of a
    language.
  • OR A system located in human brains that
    specifies the relationship between sound and
    meaning in language.

11
Basic structure of grammars
  • A system of elements and rules
  • basic sounds
  • rules for putting them together into minimal,
    basic sound-meaning pairs ("words")
  • rules for putting minimal sound-meaning pairs
    into larger entities (phrases, sentences).

12
Types of Grammar
  • Descriptive grammar
  • an objective description model of the grammar of
    a natural spoken language (the product of
    linguistic analysis) description of how people
    actually speak.
  • Prescriptive grammar
  • statements regarding how people should speak (or
    write) in order to be considered "correct" or
    "educated" (social prescriptions, norms).

13
Phonetics
  • PHONETICS The study of the phones or
    individual sounds that native speakers make.
  • PHONES The basic, etic sounds that make up
    phonemes
  • PHONEMES The basic sound units of the grammar,
    used to make different minimal sound-meaning
    pairs. The smallest sound contrasts that
    distinguish meaning.
  • PHONEMIC SYSTEM All the phonemes in a given
    language the set of phones that are arbitrarily
    but habitually perceived by the speakers as
    contrastive.

14
Phonemes
  • Minimal pair
  • two words (or other sound-meaning units)
    distinguished from one another by a single
    phonetic contrast.
  • Free variation
  • alternation of sounds with no change in meaning.

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16
Phonetic Alphabet
  • A system for phonetic transcription (i.e., a
    written record) of sounds of spoken language.
  • Sounds are classified according to the origin of
    the sound, state of the vocal chords, and the
    position of the articulators.

17
Phonetic alphabet
  • Vocal cord states
  • maximally tense stopped glottal stop
  • minimally tense voiceless voiceless glottal
    fricative
  • intermediate voiced voiced glottal fricative
  • Articulators movable speech organs in the oral
    cavity
  • lips
  • tongue
  • velum (soft palate)

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Places of Articulation in the Vocal Tract
20
Places of Articulation
  • Labials Sounds made by changing the position of
    the lips
  • Bilabial bringing two lips together b p m
  • Labiodental touching one lip to the teeth f
    v in fine and vine
  • Alveolars Sounds made by raising the tongue to
    the alveolar ridge
  • Voiced d do z zoo
  • Nasal n new
  • Voiceless t two s sue
  • Interdental Sounds make by placing the tip of
    the tongue between the teeth
  • Voiceless t thin and ether
  • Voiced t in then and either
  • Velars Sounds made by placing the back of the
    tongue onto the soft palate or velum.
  • The endings of the words back, bag, and band
  • Palatals The front part of the tongue is raised
    to the hard palatte.
  • Shoe, shut, sure, and sugar

21
Manners of articulation
  • Stops
  • Aspirated vs. Unaspirated Sounds
  • Fricatives
  • Afficates
  • Sibilants
  • Obstruents
  • Liquids
  • Glides

22
Morphology
  • Morphology The rules for combining phonemes
    into morphemes.
  • Morpheme The smallest part of an utterance that
    has a definte meaning.
  • minimal sound-meaning unit.
  • Morphemes come in two varieties
  • Bound Morpheme a morpheme that never occurs
    alone (i.e., is not a word).
  • Suffixs and prefixes ing, ed, mal, pre,
  • Free Morpheme a morpheme that may occur alone
    (i.e., is a word).

23
Morphology
  • Word minimal free form.
  • The smallest part of an utterance that has a
    definite meaning is called a morpheme.
  • It may consist of a single phoneme or a string of
    phonemes.
  • A morpheme which can occur by itself is a word
  • Homonyms (homophones)
  • morphemes which sound the same but have different
    meanings.
  • Synonyms
  • morphemes which sound different but have the same
    meanings.

24
Morphology
  • Root
  • the lexical/semantic "center" of a word the
    invariant of a group of related stems.
  • Affixes
  • morphemes which are added to other morphemes
    (esp. roots, stems).
  • A suffix follows the root/stem.
  • A prefix precedes the root/stem.
  • An infix is inserted into the root/stem

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SYNTAX The rules for combining morphemes (words)
into sentences
  • Syntax consists of the unconscious rules which
    govern sentence structure and the ways in which
    words are ordered within sentences.
  • The basic and universal divisions of Syntax
    reflects fundamental aspects of how human
    speakers perceive the world nouns for things,
    verbs for actions and events, adjectives for
    qualities.
  • The rules of syntax can be extremely complex, and
    most native-speakers are not able to cite them,
    but instinctively know how to use them
    ENCULTURATION

27
WHAT MAKES UP SYNTAX?
  • Phrase Structure rules How to construct proper
    phrases
  • Lexical Insertion rules How to use words within
    those structures
  • Transformational rules rules that apply to
    (delete, add, move elements in) phrase structure
    trees produced by Phrase Structure rules.

28
Syntactic Structure
  • Deep structure
  • the abstract, underlying syntactic representation
    (phrase structure) of sentence, produced by
    Phrase Structure and Lexical Insertion Rules.
  • Surface structure
  • the syntactic representation produced by
    application of transformational rules to deep
    structure.

29
Symbols
  • A SYMBOL is something which is used to represent
    something else, usually a much more complex
    concept.
  • We can make symbols mean anything they are
    arbitrary and their complexity is essentially
    unlimited.
  • Human beings have the ability to think in
    symbols, and language is both an outgrowth of
    that ability and probably a necessary part of it

30
Thought, Language and Society
  • Sapir-Whorf
  • language determines how we see the world and
    behavior
  • reality is filtered through language categories
  • Sociolinguistics
  • social position determines the content and form
    of language

31
Dialects
  • A language without an army
  • A way of speaking in a particular place
  • e.g. Cockney
  • Speakers are sometimes considered less
    intelligent
  • Ebonics - dialect or language?

32
Different ways of speaking depending on age,
gender, occupation and class
Language and Culture
Mother-Infant talk
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34
Paralanguage
  • Silence
  • Kinesics
  • body movement, expressions
  • some cultures are more touch-oriented
  • eye-contact in some cultures is rude
  • Dress
  • Looks

35
Mass Media
36
Language and Change
  • Colonialism was a major force of change
  • Pidgins
  • usually limited to trade
  • National policies of assimilation
  • Soviet Union
  • English-only movement in the US

37
The BIG Questions Revisited
  • What aspects of communication do linguistic
    anthropologists study?
  • How do culture, society and communication
    interact?
  • What are some important factors affecting
    language change?
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