Notes on Introduction to Linguistics I
These are the main materials for the mid-term test.
1. Chapter 1 What is Language?
Language is the method of human communication, either spoken or written, consisting of the use of words in a structured and conventional way.
Linguistic Knowledge includes:
Knowledge of the Sound System: Knowing what sounds are in that language and what sounds are not.
Knowledge of Words: Knowing the sound units that are related to specific meanings.
- Arbitrary relationship between form (sounds) and meaning (concept) of a word.
- Onomatopoeic: Words whose pronunciations suggest their meanings.
Knowledge of Sentences: Knowing how to form sentences.
Linguistic Competence: What you know about a language.
Linguistic Performance: How you use this knowledge in actual speech production and comprehension.
Prescriptive Grammar:
1762; Bishop Robert Lowth; A Short Introduction to English Grammar with Critical Notes.
- I don’t have none I don’t have any
- You was wrong You were wrong
- Mathilda is fatter than me Mathilda is fatter than I
Many of those rules were based on Latin grammar. Latin was assumed as the respected scientific language in the 15th – 17th Centuries.
Descriptive Grammar:
1985; Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech, and Jan Svartvik; A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language.
- Based on a corpus of actual spoken and written English.
2. Chapter 3 Morphology: The Word of Language
The development of monolingual dictionaries:
1604; Robert Cawdrey; A Table Alphabetical; 2,500 entries.
1755; Dr. Samuel Johnson; Dictionary of the English Language; two volumes.
1828; Noah Webster; An American Dictionary of the English Language; two volumes; 70,000 entries.
Webster’s Third International Dictionary of English Language has over 450,000 entries.
Content words: Nouns, Verbs, Adjectives, and Adverbs.
Function words: Conjunctions, Prepositions, Articles, Pronouns,
Morpheme: The minimal unit of meaning.
Free morpheme: a single morpheme that constitutes a word and can stand alone.
Bound morpheme: a morpheme that must be attached to another morpheme.
Prefix: An affix that occurs before a morpheme.
Some examples of negative prefixes:
Prefix
/Added to
/Example
UN-
/adjectives
/unfair
NON-
/various classes
/non-smoker, nonsense, non-drip
DIS-
/adjectives, verbs, nouns
/disloyal, dislike, disfavour
A-
/adjectives, nouns
/amoral, asymmetry
Degree and size prefixes:
Prefix
/Meaning
/Added to
/Example
Arch-
/highest, worst
/nouns
/archduke, arch-enemy
Super-
/above, better
/nouns, adjectives
/superman, supernatural
Over-
/too much
/verbs, adjectives
/overeat, overconfident
Hyper-
/extremely
/adjectives
/hyperactive
Sub-
/lower than
/adjectives
/substandard
Mini-
/little
/nouns
/minibus
Suffix: An affix that occurs after a morpheme.
Class preserving suffixation:
Suffix
/Meaning
/Example
-er
/occupation
/engineer
-ian
/occupation
/musician
-ist
/occupation
/violinist
-let
/small
/piglet
Class changing suffixation:
- Verbs Nouns
- Verbs Adjectives
- Adjectives Nouns
- Adjectives Verbs
- Nouns Verbs
- Nouns Adjectives
Derivational morpheme: deriving (creating) a new word with a new meaning.
Inflectional morpheme: changing the form of a word because of the rules of syntax.
English inflectional morphemes:
Nouns
–splural
–’spossessive
Verbs
–sthird person singular present
–edpast tense
–en past participle
–ingprogressive
Adjectives
–ercomparative
–estsuperlative
Word Coinage: Compounds, Acronyms, Back-formations, Abbreviations, Eponyms, and Blends.
Compounds: Two or more words joined together to a form a new word.
Home + work homework
Pick + pocket pickpocket
Note: The meaning of a compound is not always the sum of the meanings of its parts.
Coconut oil oil made from coconuts.
Olive oil oil made from olives.
Baby oil ......
cathouse ......
blue-movies ......
blue-chip ......
Acronyms: Words derived from the initials of several words.
National Aeronautics and Space Agency ......
Self-contained underwater breathing apparatus ......
...... FYI
...... TGIF
...... a.k.a
Back-formations: Creative reduction due to incorrect morphological analysis.
Editor (1649) edit (1791)
Television (1907) televise (1927)
Abbreviations (Clipping): A word which is clipped.
Facsimile fax
Hamburger burger
Gasoline ......
Advertisement ......
Omnibus ......
Words from Names (Eponyms): Words derived from proper names or things.
Sandwich
Celsius
Blends: Similar to compounds, but parts of the words are deleted.
Motor + hotel Motel
Breakfast + lunch ......
modulator, demodulator ......
Deny Arnos Kwary
Lecturer of Linguistics
AirlanggaUniversity