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Main Branches of Linguistics

Main Branches of Linguistics. Introduction. Core of linguistics – study of language structure at different levels No other field describes language so systematically & completely Language plays a part in many areas of human life

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Main Branches of Linguistics

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  1. Main Branches of Linguistics

  2. Introduction • Core of linguistics – study of language structure at different levels • No other field describes language so systematically & completely • Language plays a part in many areas of human life • Link of linguistics with many areas has led to the growth of many branches of linguistics

  3. Intro (contd…) • Like other sciences Linguistics has pure aspects – theories & description and analysis of different levels of language • It also has practical aspect – application of knowledge in learning & teaching of languages, correction & improvement of speech disorders, appreciate the use of language in literature

  4. Intro (contd..) • Applied linguistics covers practical application of theories, concepts and analyses provided by linguistics • All applications are based on a thorough description of languages.

  5. Intro (contd…) • Corder (1973, p.148) says: Whether it is speech therapy, psychiatry, literary criticism, translation..what all these fields of application have in common is the necessity for descriptions of the various languages involved.

  6. Intro (contd…) • Language is related to the inner world of man’s mind & to the outer world of society and social relationships. • Each of these aspects has led to the study of ‘Psycholinguistics’ & ‘Sociolinguistics’

  7. Psycholinguistics • recent branch of linguistics developed in the sixties • study of interrelationship of psychological & linguistic behaviour • uses linguistic concepts to describe psychological processes connected with the acquisition and use of language

  8. Psycholinguistics • Earlier it covered acoustic phonology and language pathology • Nowadays it is influenced deeply by the development of Generative theory and the most important area is language acquisition • It has raised and partly answered questions such as: how children acquire mother tongue

  9. Psycholinguistics • How children grow up linguistically and learn to handle the registral and stylistic varieties of their mother tongue effectively. • How much of the linguistic system that they finally command are they born with and how much do they discover on the basis of their exposure to language

  10. Psycholinguistics • Psycholinguistics related to mental phenomenon - so mental processes articuled in language behaviour • It studies processes of thought, concept formation and their articulation in language. • This reveal about structures of human psychology and language.

  11. Psycholinguistics • Cognitive psychology: It explores how meanings are understood by human brain, how syntax and memory are linked & how messages are ‘decoded’ and stored • Psycholinguistics studies influence of intelligence, motivation, anxiety etc. on the kind of language understood and produced.

  12. Psycholinguistics • Psychological reasons may lead to errors – they influence comprehension and production • State of mind influences perception of speech sounds or graphic symbols • Example: Children mistake one letter for another (Dyslexia) – Psycholinguistics can offer some corrective measures for this

  13. Psycholinguistics • concerned with learning of language at various stages: early acquisition of a first language by children and later stages of acquisition of first and other languages • Psycholinguists try to answer questions such as whether the human brain has an inborn language ability.

  14. Psycholinguistics • Whether this ability is structured in such a way that certain grammatical and semantic patterns are embedded in it which can explain the learning capability. • Whether a universal grammar present in the mind of every human being which is transformed in particular situations to produce different languages

  15. Psycholinguistics • Significance of Psycholinguistic studies – helpful in language teaching (understand error production & individual differences among learners, devise appropriate syllabi) • Neurolinguistics: It studies the psychological basis of language and language disorders (aphasia, loss of memory etc.)

  16. Psycholinguistics • Idea of logic – Some ancient philosophers held that since human mind is rational and capable of thinking logically, language, too, is logically ordered and rational. • Others said that just as irrationality is present in human mind, irregularity and anomaly is present in human language. • The debate continues

  17. Psycholinguistics -Acquisition of language • Much of the psycholinguistics influenced by generative theory and the so-called mentalists. • Children master most of the structures by five or six. • The generative approach argued against the earlier behaviourist assumptions that language development could be explained in terms of imitation and selective reinforcement

  18. Psycholinguistics -Acquisition of language • Psycholinguists argue that imitation is not enough; it is not merely by mechanical repetition that children acquire language • They also acquire it by natural exposure • Nature & Nurture both influence language acquisition in children

  19. Psycholinguistics -Acquisition of language • Children learn first not items but systems • Every normal child develops this abstract knowledge of his mother tongue or a foreign tongue to some extent. • Generative approach argues that this is possible only if certain features of competence are present in the brain of the child right from the beginning

  20. Psycholinguistics -Acquisition of language • These innate features ‘pre-structure’ it towards language learning • To develop these innate features into adult competence, a child needs to be exposed to human language – it must be stimulated in a proper way to respond • David Crystal observes that the basis on which it develops its linguistic abilities is not describable in behaviourist terms

  21. Summary • Recent developments aim to give psychological reality to the description of language • Chomsky regards linguistics as a sub-field of psychology. • Chomsky says in his book ‘Language and mind’ that the most important contribution of linguists would be the study of human mind

  22. Summary • The bonds between psychology and linguists become stronger by the extent to which language is influenced by and itself influences such things as memory, motivation, attention, recall & perception • Psycholinguistics is language and the mind • Sociolinguistics is language and community

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