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2023年12月23日发(作者:guice框架)
语言学-名词解释
1. Language is a scientific system of arbitrary vocal symbols
used for human communication.
2. Minimal pairs are the word forms which differ from each
other only by one sound. In other words, when two different
forms re identical in every way except for one sound segment
that occurs in the same place in the string; the two words are
called minimal pairs.
3. A morpheme is the smallest linguistic unit that carries
grammatical and/or semantic meaning.
4. IPA: A phonetic transcription is an economical means for
capturing sounds on paper, that is, a method of writing down
speech sounds in a systematic and consistent way. The best-known system, the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), has
been developing since 1888.
5. SLA: second language acquisition to refer to the process
of acquiring or learning an additional language after the learner
has acquired his or her mother tongue.
6. Linguistics is the science of language for all human
societies, and is defined as the systematic study of language.
7. Diachronic study: the description of the historical
development of a language. Linguistic study in the 19th century
was primarily concerned with the diachronic description.
8. Synchronic study: the description of a particular state of a
language at a single point of time. The priority of synchronic
description is a characteristic of most twentieth-century linguistic
theories.
9. Syntagmatic relation: the relations between units which
combine to form sequences
10. Paradigmatic relation: oppositions which produce distinct
and alternative terms
11. Competence refers to the knowledge that native speakers
have of their language as system of abstract formal relations.
That is the ideal language user’s knowledge of the rules of his
language.
12. Performance refers to what we do when we speak or
listen, that is, the actual realization of this knowledge in
utterances.
13. A corpus refers to a collection of linguistic data, either
complicated as written texts or as a transcription of recorded
speech.
14. A phonetic transcription is an economical means for
capturing sounds on paper, that is, a method of writing down
speech sounds in a systematic and consistent way.
15. Phoneme is the minimum phonemic unit that is not
further analyzable into smaller units. It is the basic unit in
phonological analysis.
16. Sound patterns refer to the set of sounds that occur in a
given language, the permissible arrangements of these sounds in
words, and the processes for adding, deleting, or changing
sounds.
17. Stress is the pronunciation of a word or syllable with more
force than the surrounding words or syllables.
18. Pitch is a suprasegmental quality which extends over
individual segments and longer stretches of speech.
19. Inflection refers to the process of adding an affix to a
word or changing it in some other way according to the rules of
the grammar of a language.
20. Proverbs are normally in the form of a sentence. A
proverb is often a short sentence that people often quote and
use to give advice and state some general human life experience
and problem.
21. Synonymy: words or expressions with the same or similar
meaning are said to be synonymy.
22. Homonymy refers to cases where lexemes with the same
phonological or morphological shape have different meanings.
23. a speech act:An action performed by the use of an
utterance to communicate is called a speech act.
24. Dialect refers to any regional, social or ethnic variety of a
language.
25. Register refers to the functional variety of language that
is defined according to its use in context. Registers vary
according to the three parameters of context: field, tenor and
mode (Halliday, 1978).
26. Language planning refers to a deliberate attempt, usually
at the level of the state or government administration, to affect
language use in order to prevent or to solve some problems of
communication.
27. Hyponymy is used to refer to a specific—general
semantic relationship between lexical items.
1. What is the scope of linguistics? Answer: there are six
branches of linguistics. 1)Phonetics is the study of human speech
sounds.2)Phonology is the study of sound
patterning.3)Morphology is the study of the internal structures of
the form of words.4)Syntax is the study of sentence
structure.5)Semantics is the study of meaning.6)Pragmatics
studies how speakers use language in ways which can not be
predicted from linguistic knowledge alone.
2. What are the differences between Langue and Parole?
Please analysis the distinctions of Langue and Parole.
Answer: This distinction is proposed by Saussure in his
Course in General Linguistics.
Langue: the abstract system; a collective body of knowledge;
a kind of common reference manual; acquired by all members of
a community of speakers; relatively stable and systematic.
Parole: the particular actualities of individual utterance; the
contingent executive side of things; the relatively superficial
behavioral reflexes of knowledge; the use of language in
utterances; subject to personal or situational constraints.
3. Please describe the three kinds of Origin of Language?
Answer:1) Creation (Devine Origin) Almost every religion has
stories about how man received language from god. The divine
origin theorists propose that in the beginning there was one
language from one source, which later became corrupted into
many languages.2) Evolution:Men evolved from lower forms of
life; language, too, evolved. 3) Invention:The invention theory
believes that there is a natural connection between the forms of
language and the essence of things.
describe the semantic relations : (1)
synonymy and antonymy:
Words or expressions with the same or similar meaning are
said to be synonymous. Antonymy is the relationship of
oppositeness of meaning. (2) meronymy and hyponymy:
Meronymy is a term used to describe a part-whole relationship
between lexical items. Hyponymy is used to refer to a specific—general semantic relationship between lexical items. (3) polysemy
and homonymy: When a single lexeme has several meanings, it
is called my refers to cases where lexemes
with the same phonological or morphological shape have
different meanings.
5. In 1967, linguist Grice proposed the term of the
cooperative principle and its maxims. Then please describe the
cooperative principle and its : According to
cooperative principle, the participants in a conversation normally
communicate in a maximally efficient, rational and cooperative
way. They should speak sincerely, relevantly and clearly, while
providing sufficient information.
Four maxims:(1)The maxim of qualityTry to make your
contribution one that is true, especially: (i) do not say what you
believe to be false and (ii) do not say that for which you lack
adequate evidence.(2)The maxim of your
contribution as informative as is required for the current
purposes of the exchange and (ii) do not make your contribution
more informative than is required.(3)The maxim of
your contribution relevant.(4)The maxim of
perspicuous, and specifically: (i) Avoid obscurity of
expression; (ii) Avoid ambiguity; (iii) Be brief (avoid unnecessary
prolixity) and (iv) Be orderly.
6. What are the major differences between acquisition and
language learning?
Acquisition is called as the spontaneous internalization of
rules and formulas. First language acquisition is also called
mother tongue acquisition. Acquisition takes place in the speech
community where one’s first language or second language is
spoken. It is often natural, without much focus on form. The
learning of English by speakers of other languages in the United
States is an example of second language acquisition.
Foreign language learning is usually takes place in the
speech community where one’s first language is spoken. It is a
conscious process through formal school-like settings and
requires time for processing, for example, the learning of English
in China.
7. Is the language arbitrary? Please analyze the concept of
arbitrariness.
Answer: Language is Arbitrary Saussure regards the linguistic
sign as a two-sided psychological entity. Concept and sound-image are replaced by signified所指and signifier能指respectively.
Arbitrariness is the result of the need to express and code a wide
range of meanings. The speaker of a language, based upon the
convention established in the speech community, associates
linguistic signs with things and concepts. For example, there is
no connection between the word tree and the plant it signifies. It
can equally be called shù in Chinese and arbre in French.
8. What is register? And please describe its three parameters.
Answer: Register refers to the functional variety of language
that is defined according to its use in context. Registers vary
according to the three parameters of context: field, tenor and
mode.
(1) Field refers to the social action. It involves what is
happening, the nature of the social action that is taking place and
what the participants are engaged in. Field is the linguistic
reflection of the role of the language use with a definite purpose
in the situation in which a text has occurred. (2) Tenor refers the
role structure. It involves: who is taking part, the nature of the
participants, their status and roles, and the type of role
relationship between the participants.
(3) Mode refers to the linguistic channel and the rhetorical
mode. Mode reflects the relationship of the language use to the
medium of transmission. (Halliday, 1978)
9. What are the Politeness Principle and its maxims?
Answer: Leech (1983:132) develops the face theory further
and formulates the politeness principle.
a) Tact maxim:Minimize cost to other; Maximize cost of self
b) Generosity maxim:Minimize benefit to self; Maximize
praise of other
c) Approbation maxim:Minimize dispraise of other;
Maximize dispraise of self
d) Modesty maxim:Minimize disagreement between self
and other; Maximize sympathy between self and other
e) Agreement maxim:Minimize disagreement between self
and other; Maximize agreement between self and other
f) Sympathy maxim: Minimize antipathy between self and
other; Maximize sympathy between self and other.
10. Please analyze the distinctions between Free and bound
morphemes.
Answer: If a morpheme can constitute a word (free form) by
itself, it is called a free morpheme, like room, bottle, stand, large.
If a morpheme has meaning only when connected with at least
another morpheme, it is bound, like un- in unlucky, and the plural
–s in bags.
A bound morpheme is also called an affix in the sense that it
is always added to another morpheme. Affixes can be further
divided into prefixes, suffixes and infixes. e.g. dis- in disorder;
mini- in minibus; en- in ensure;-ful, in useful; -less in careless; -e-
in men and women; -i- in mice and lice; -ee- in feet and teeth.
11. Specifically, what do the inflectional morphemes include
in modern English, and what do these inflectional morphemes
indicate? Answer: Inflectional morphemes include in modern
English indicate case and number of nouns, tense and aspect of
verbs, and degree of adjectives and adverbs. Specially, modern
English inflectional morphemes include:
-’s, indicating the possessive case of nouns;
-(e)s, indicating the plural form of noun;
-(e)s, indicating the simple present tense of verbs sgreeing
with a third person sigular subject;
-ed, indicationg the past tense of verbs;
-ing, indicating the progressive aspect of verbs;
-er, indicating the comparative degree of adjectives and
adverbs;
-est, indicating the superlative degree of adjectives and
adverbs.
12. Please explain the Nature of Language as clearly as you
can.
Answer: The nature of language has 6 characteristics:
1) Language is Systematic; 2) Language is Symbolic; 3)
Language is Arbitrary;4) Language is primarily vocal;
5) Language is Human Specific;6) Language is Used for
Communication.
13. What are the major differences between Speech and
Writing?
Answer: Linguists regard the spoken languages as primary,
not the written.
1) Speech is prior to writing historically.2) Genetically,
children always learn to speak before they learn to write.
This is not to deny the importance of writing:
1) With writing, messages can be carried through space.2)
With writing, messages can be carried through time.
3) Oral messages are subject to misunderstanding distortion.
Everything considered, speech is believed to be more
representative of human language than writing. Written
language has a life of its own. Speech has the restriction of both
time and space.
14. What are the major differences between Competence
and Performance?
Answer: This distinction was proposed by American linguist
Chomsky in the 1950s.
Competence refers to the knowledge that native speakers
have of their language as system of abstract formal relations.
That is the ideal language user’s knowledge of the rules of his
language.
Performance refers to what we do when we speak or listen,
that is, the actual realization of this knowledge in utterances.
A speaker’s competence is stable but his performance is
often influenced by psychological and social factors.
16. What may language varieties include? Describe them
clearly.
Answer: Language varieties may include lingua franca, pidgin,
and creole.
(1) Lingua franca通用语------ the general term that serves as
a means of communication between different groups of speakers.
It can be internationally used language like English, or the mother
tongue of one of the groups.
(2) Pidgin洋泾浜------ a contact language that arises in
situations where speakers of different languages can not
understand each other’s first language or native language and,
thus, need to develop a common means of communication.
Linguistically, pidgins are characterized by a limited vocabulary,
a greater use of paraphrase and metaphor, a simplified
phonological system, and a reduced morphology and syntax.
(3) Creole 克里奥尔语------ creoles are former pidgins whose
functional and grammatical limitations and simplification have
been eliminated and which now function as full-fledged,
standardized native languages.
17. What is dialect and its subdivisions of a language?
Answer: Dialect refers to any regional, social or ethnic variety
of a language. All languages spoken by more than one small
homogeneous community are found to consist of two or more
dialects.
Dialects are subdivisions of a language.
1) Regional Dialects --- the language variety used in a
geographical region. When people are separated from each
other geographically, dialectal diversity develops.
2) Social Dialects --- is used to describe differences in speech
associated with various social groups or classes. Whereas
regional dialects are geographically based, social dialects
originate among social groups and are related to a variety of
factors. Social dialect could be further distinguished by gender,
age, ethnic group, religion, and class.
3) Standard Dialect--- refers to a special variety of language
that has no connection with a particular region or social class.
18. What are register and the three parameters?
Answer: Register refers to the functional variety of language
that is defined according to its use in context. Registers vary
according to the three parameters of context: field, tenor and
mode (Halliday, 1978).
(1) Field refers to the social action. It involves what is
happening, the nature of the social action that is taking place and
what the participants are engaged in. Field is the linguistic
reflection of the role of the language use with a definite purpose
in the situation in which a text has occurred. (2) Tenor refers the
role structure. It involves: who is taking part, the nature of the
participants, their status and roles, and the type of role
relationship between the participants.
(3) Mode refers to the linguistic channel and the rhetorical
mode. Mode reflects the relationship of the language use to the
medium of transmission.
15. What are the Leech’s Seven Types of Meaning? Describe
them clearly.
Answer: According to Leech (1981), there exist seven types
of meaning, five of which are included in the associative meaning.
(1) Conceptual meaning: 概念意义it is called “denotative”or
“cognitive”meaning. This refers to the definition given in the
dictionary. For example, man can be defined by the contrastive
features [+Human], [+Male], [+Adult], as distinct from girl, which
can be defined as [+Human], [-Male], [-Adult].
(2) Associative meaning:联想意义it refers to the meaning
associated with the conceptual meaning, which can be further
divided into following five types.
(i) Connotative meaning. 内涵意义This is the communicative
value attributed to an expression over and above is purely
conceptual meaning. For example, woman with unappreciable
properties such as frail, prone to tears, cowardly, irrational,
inconstant, as well as virtues like gentle, compassionate,
hardworking, sensitive.
(ii) Social meaning: it is refers o what is communicated of the
social circumstances of language use, including variations like
dialect, time, topic, and style.
(iii) Affective meaning:情感意义it is what is communicated of
the feelings and attitudes of the speaker/ writer towards the
listener/reader/and /or what he or she is talking about. E.g. idiot
conveys one’s despise or describes sth. as “marvelous”to
express o ne’s positive evaluation.
(iv) Reflected meaning: it is the meaning when we associate
one sense of an expression with another. For example, the word
dear in certain context is used in the sense ―expensive‖ but also
alludes to the sense of ―beloved‖.
(v) Collocative meaning搭配意义: This refers to what is
communicated though association with words which tends to
occur in the environment of another words. Both pretty and
handsome can be used to mean “good-looking”but differ in
the range of nouns with which they can co-occur or collocate. For
example, pretty can go with girl, woman, flower, garden, color,
village, etc. while handsome can collocate with boy, man, car, car,
vessel, overcoat, airliner, typewriter, etc.
(3) Thematic meaning 主题意义This is what is communicated
by the way in which the message is organized in terms of order
and emphasis.
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