1 / 15

The properties of language

The properties of language. Lec.2. Unique Properties. There are a number of unique properties found in human languages. . Communicative vs. Informative. Communicative signals are intentional e.g. I’m sick today. Informative signals are not intentional

hali
Télécharger la présentation

The properties of language

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The properties of language Lec.2

  2. Unique Properties • There are a number of unique properties found in human languages.

  3. Communicative vs. Informative • Communicative signals are intentional • e.g. I’m sick today • Informative signals are not intentional • E.g. red nose, sneezing, runny nose, etc.

  4. 1. Displacement • The ability to speak about things other than here and now. • Displacement is the most momentous between human language & the signaling system of all other species. • We can refer to mythical creature, fairies, angles, & create fiction (Avatar)

  5. 1. Displacement Human Language Animal Communication System • Humans can refer to: • past, the future, as well as to locations. • hypothetical or counterfactual states of affairs • E.g. dreams, childhood, dinosaurs • Animals lack this property. • Exception: the bee dance

  6. 2. Arbitrariness • The absence of any necessary connection between a linguistic form (a word) and its meaning. • Le chat = cat = قطة • Arbitrariness is pervasive in human languages. • The particular sequence of sounds selected in a given language is completely arbitrary. • Due to this feature, even the most powerful computer program can have no way of guessing the meaning of a word it has not encountered before.

  7. 2. Arbitrariness Human Language Animal Communication System • Every word (form) denotes an a concept or an object. • each word is formed according to the phonological system of the language. • The particular sequence of sounds selected in a given language is completely arbitrary. • There appear s to be a clear connection between the message and the signal used to convey it. • the set of signals is finite

  8. 3. Productivity/ Creativity • Productivity is reflected in our creative ability to (1) combine words to form phrases, and phrases to form sentences, and (2) to produce new sentences never spoken before & understand sentences never heard before. • Productivity makes language extremely flexible & limitless

  9. 3. Productivity Human Language Animal Communication System • All human languages make use of a finite set of discrete sound and letters to form infinite set of sentences and structures • Animals have a fixed set of signal (fixed reference), each related to a particular object or occasion. • 1 signal = 1 message

  10. 4. Discreteness • The sounds that are used in language are meaningfully distinct. • Each sound in the language system is treated as a linguistically specific & discrete sound. • E.g. // & // • // & //

  11. 5. Cultural Transmission • Human language is passed down from one generation to another regardless of ethnic issues.

  12. 6. Duality • Language is organized at two levels or layers simultaneously • A small number of meaningless units are combined to produce a large number of meaningful units. • It is one of the most economical features of human language.

  13. 6. Duality Human Language Animal Communication System Layer 1 • Finite / fixed set • individual phonemes – • meaningless Layer 2 infinite / open-ended • Phoneme combination • no. of phonemes = 44/45 • no. of messages ≠ 45 One layer ONLY • The no. of signals corresponds to the no. of messages. • 20 vocal signals = 20 messages

  14. Other properties • Vocal-auditory channel • Reciprocity • Specialization • Non-directionality • Rapid fade

  15. References • Yule, George. (1996). The Study of Language. Mass.: Cambridge UP • Chapter: (3) pp. 19-29

More Related