英语语言学复习重点
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英语语言学知识点总结
英语语言学是研究英语语言及其发展历史、语音、语法、词汇、语用等方面的学科。
以下是一些英语语言学的知识点总结:
1. 英语语音学:英语语音学主要研究英语的发音、声调、重音等语音现象。
其中,英语的发音规则主要包括元音、辅音和声调等方面的规则。
2. 英语语法学:英语语法学主要研究英语的语法结构和规则,包括句子结构、时态、语态、名词、形容词、副词等语法范畴。
3. 英语词汇学:英语词汇学主要研究英语的词汇构成、演化和使用情况,包括单词、词组和习语等方面的研究。
4. 英语语用学:英语语用学主要研究英语的语用功能和语境,包括语言交际、暗示、礼貌、语用失误等方面的研究。
5. 英语语音语调学:英语语音语调学主要研究英语的语音语调系统,包括英语的发音、声调、重音、节奏等方面的研究。
6. 英语文体学:英语文体学主要研究英语的文体风格和语言习惯,包括正式文体、口语文体、文学文体等方面的研究。
7. 英语词汇记忆学:英语词汇记忆学主要研究如何有效地记忆英语词汇,包括词汇记忆的方法、技巧和策略等方面的研究。
8. 英语跨文化交际学:英语跨文化交际学主要研究英语在不同文化中的交际和使用,包括跨文化沟通、文化差异、交际礼仪等方面的研究。
以上是一些英语语言学的重要知识点总结,不同学科之间的交叉
和融合也在不断推进着英语语言学的发展。
第一章1.What is language?Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication2。
Design features of language①Arbitrariness(任意性)refers to the forms of linguistic signs bear no natural relationship to their meaning。
(sounds and meanings)②Duality(二层性):The property of having two levels of structures, such that units of the primary level are composed of elements of the secondary level and each of the two levels has its own principles of organization。
③Productivity/creativity(创造性):Language is productive in that it makes possible the construction and interpretation of new signals by its users。
④Displacement(移位性):Human Languages enable their users to symbolize objects, events and concepts which are not present (in time and space) at moment of communication. (p7)3.Functions of language① Informative(信息功能):to give information about facts。
Chapter 1 Invitations to Linguisticsnguage is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication. To give the barest definition language is a means of verbal communication. It is instrumental social and conventional. Linguistics is usually defined as the science of language or alternatively as the scientific study of language. It concerns with the systematic study of language or a discipline that describes all aspects of language and formulates theories as to how language works.2.Design features refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication. They are arbitrariness, duality, creativity, displacement etc.Arbitrariness refers to forms of linguistic signs bear no natural relationship to their meaning Language is arbitrary. There is no logical connection between meanings and sounds even with onomatopoeic words.Duality refers to the property of having two levels of structure. The units of the primary level are composed of elements of the secondary level and each of the two levels has its own principles of organization.☺the lower or the basic level---- the sound units or phonemes which are meaningless, but can be grouped and regrouped into words.☺the higher level ----morphemes and words which are meaningfulCreativity refers to Words can be used in new ways to mean new things and can be instantly understood by people who have never come across that usage before.Displacement refers to the fact that language can be used to refer to things which are present or not present real or imagined matters in the past present or future or in far away places. It means that human languages enable their users to symbolize objects events and concepts which are not present in time and space at the moment of communication3. Jakobson’s classification of functions of language.Jakobson : In his article Linguistics and Poetics (1960) defined six primary factors of any speech event: speaker, addressee, context,message, code, contact.1).Referential function 所指功能2).Poetic function诗学功能3).Emotive function感情功能4).Conative function意动功能5).Phatic function交感功能6).Metalingual元语言功能Hu Zhuanglin’ classification of functions of language and use some examples to illustrate them.1).Informative function 信息功能2).Interpersonal function 人际功能3).Performative function 施为功能4).Emotive function 感情功能5).Phatic communion 交感性谈话6).Recreational function 娱乐性功能7).Metalingual function 元语言功能4. What are the major differences between Saussure’s distinction between langue and parole and Chomsky’s distinction between competence and performance?According to Saussure,(1) Langue is abstract, parole is specific to the speaking situation;(2) Langue is not actually spoken by an individual , parole is always a naturally occurring event;(3) Langue is relatively stable and systematic, parole is a mass of confused facts, thus not suitable for systematic investigation.According to N. Chomsky,Competence enables a speaker to produce and understand an indefinite number of sentences and to recognize grammatical mistakes and ambiguities; A speaker’s competence is stable while his performance is often influenced by psychological and social factors. So a speaker's performance does not always match or equal his supposed competence; Chomsky believes that linguists ought to study competence, rather than performance. In other words, they should discover what an ideal speaker knows of his native language.Chapter 2 Speech Sounds1.Phonetics studies how speech sounds are produced, transmitted and received. It is concerned with the actual physical articulation, transmission and perception of speech sounds.Phonology is essentially the description of the systems and patterns of speech sounds. It is concerned with the abstract and mental aspect of the sounds in language.Phonology aims to discover how speech sounds in a language form patterns and how these sounds are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication1.Lips2.Teeth3.Teeth ridge (alveolar)齿龈4.Hard palate 硬腭5.Soft palate (velum) 软腭6.Uvula 小舌7.Tip of tongue8.Blade of tongue 舌面9.Back of tongue10.V ocal cords 声带11.Pharyngeal cavity 咽腔12.Nasal cavity 鼻腔2.Phone(音素): the smallest perceptible discreet segment of sound in a stream of speech. (in the mouth)Phoneme (音位):A sound which is capable of distinguishing one word or one shape of a word from another in a given language is a phoneme. (in the mind)allophone (音位变体) : phonic variants of a phoneme are called allophone of the same phoneme. / / = phoneme [ ] = phone { } = set of allophonesIPA:the abbreviation of International Phonetic Alphabet.Minimal pairs 最小对立体Three requirements for identifying minimal pairs:1) different in meaning; 2) only one phoneme different;3) the different phonemes occur in the same phonetic environment.e.g. a minimal pair: pat-fat; lit-lip; phone-toneminimal set: pat, mat, bat, fat, cat, hat, etcplementary distribution 互补分布Phonetically similar sounds might be related in two ways.If they are two distinctive phonemes, they might form a contrast; e.g. /p/and /b/ in [pit] and [bit];If they are allophones of the same phoneme, then they don’t distinguish meaning, but complement each other in distribution, i.e. they occur in different phonetic contextSuprasegmental features 超音段特征—features that involve more than single sound segment, such as stress (重音),length(音程), rhythm (节奏),tone(音调),intonation(语调)及juncture(音渡).Chapter 3 Lexicon/Morphology1. Word1.1 Three senses of “word”(1) A physically definable unit: a cluster of sound segments or letters between two pause orblank.(2) Word both as a general term and as a specific term.(3) A grammatical unit1.2 Identification of wordsSome factors can help us identify words:(1) Stability(2) Relative uninterruptibility(3) A minimum free form1.3 The classification of wordWords can be classified in terms of:(1) Variable vs. invariable words (可变词/不可变词)(2) Grammatical words vs. lexical words (语法词/词汇词)(3) Closed-class words vs. open-class words (封闭词/开放词)(4) word class(词类)(1) Variable vs. invariable words (可变词/不可变词)the former refers to words having inflective changes(屈折变化)while the latter refers to words having no such endings.Variable words: follow; follows; following; followedInvariable words: since; when; seldom; through; hello(2) Grammatical words vs. lexical words (function words and content words.语法词/词汇词)The former refers to those words expressing grammatical meanings, such as conjunctions(连词), prepositions(介词), articles(冠词), and pronouns(代词);the latter refers to words having lexical meanings, those which refer to substance, action etc. such as n., v., adj., and adv..(3) Closed-class words vs. open-class words (封闭词/开放词)the former refers to words whose membership is fixed or limited; e.g. pron., prep., conj., article. the latter of which the membership is infinite or unlimited. e.g.: n., v., adj., adv.(4) word class (词类)The traditionally recognized word classes are: noun, pronoun, adjective, verb, adverb, preposition, conjunction, interjection, article, etc. More word classes have been introduced into grammar: particles 小品词/语助词(go by, look for, come up);auxiliaries 助词(can, be, will);pro-form 替代词(do, so);determiners 前置词/ 限定词(all, every, few, plenty of, this).2. The formation of word2.1 Morphology 形态学Definition:Morphology is a branch of linguistics, which studies the internal structure of words and the rules by which words are formed.The two fields (p64)Inflectional morphology: the study of inflectionsDerivational morphology: the study of word-formation3. Lexical change3.1 Lexical change proper(词本身的变化)Invention 新造词Blending混合词Abbreviation 缩合词Acronym首字母缩略词back-formation 逆构词analogical creation 类比造词Borrowing 借词、外来词definition:1) Morphology:Morphology is a branch of linguistics, which studies the internal structure of words and the rules by which words are formed.2) Terminology 术语解释Morpheme: The smallest unit of meaning, which can not be divided into further smaller units without destroying or drastically altering the meaning, whether it is lexical or grammatical.Free morphemes: morphemes which may constitute words by themselves.Bound morphemes:morphemes which can not be used by themselves, but must be combined with other morphemes to form wordsInflectional morpheme: a kind of bound morphemes which manifest various grammatical relations or grammatical categories such as number, tense, degree and case.Derivational morpheme: a kind of bound morphemes, added to existing forms to create new words. There are three kinds according to position: prefix, suffix and infix.Chapter 4 Syntax From Word to TextSyntax is the study of the rules governing the ways different constituents are combined to form sentences in a language, or the study of the interrelationships between elements in sentence structures.Endocentric Constructions:is one whose distribution is functionally equivalent to that of one or more of its constituents, i.e., a word or a group of words, which serves as a definable centre or head.Exocentric Constructions:refers to a group of syntactically related words where none of the words is functionally equivalent to the group as a whole, that is, there is no definable “Centre” or “Head” inside the group Category: refers to the defining properties of these general units:Categories of the noun: number, gender, case and countabilityCategories of the verb: tense, aspect, voicethree kinds of syntactic relations:relations of position位置关系Positional relation, or WORD ORDER, refers to the sequential arrangement of words in a language.relations of substitutability 可替代性关系The Relation of Substitutability refers to classes or sets of words substitutable for each other grammatically in sentences with the same structure.relations of co-occurrence 同现关系It means that words of different sets of clauses may permit, or require, the occurrence of a word of another set or class to form a sentence or a particular part of a sentence.Immediate Constituent Analysis (IC Analysis)Immediate constituent analysis is a form of linguistic review that breaks down longer phrases or sentences into their constituent parts, usually into single words. This kind of analysis is sometimes abbreviated as IC analysis, and gets used extensively by a wide range of language experts.Endocentric constructions fall into two main types, depending on the relation between constituents: Coordination and subordinationCoordination is a common syntactic pattern in English and other languages formed by grouping together two or more categories of the same type with the help of a conjunction such as and, but and or .Subordination refers to the process or result of linking linguistic units so that they have different syntactic status, one being dependent upon the other, and usually a constituent of the other.Characteristics of subjectsA) Word order: Subject ordinarily precedes the verb in the statementB) Pro-forms(代词形式) : The first and third person pronouns in English appear in a special form when the pronoun is a subjectC) Agreement with the verb: In the simple present tense, an -s is added to the verb when a third person subject is singular, but the number and person of the object or any other element in the sentence have no effect at all on the form of the verbD) Content questions (实意问句): If the subject is replaced by a question word (who or what), the rest of the sentence remains unchangedE) Tag question (反意问句): A tag question is used to seek confirmation of a statement. It always contains a pronoun which refers back to the subject, and never to any other element in the sentence.Explain the difference between sense and reference from the following four aspects:1) A word having reference must have sense;2) A word having sense might not have reference;3) A certain sense can be realized by more than one reference; 4) A certain reference can beexpressed by more than one senseThe distinction between “sense” and “reference” is co mparable to that between “connotation” and “denotation”. The former refers to some abstract properties, while the latter refers to some concrete entities.Firstly, to some extent, we can say that every word has a sense, i.e., some conceptual content; otherwise we would not be able to use it or understand it. Secondly, but not every word has a reference. There are linguistic expressions which can never be used to refer to anything, for example, the words so, very, maybe, if, not, and all. These words do of course contribute meaning to the sentences in which they occur and thus help sentences denote, but they themselves do not identify entities in the world. They are intrinsically non-referring terms. And words like ghost and dragon refer to imaginary things, which do not exist in reality. Thirdly, some expressions will have the same reference across a range of utterances, e.g., the Eiffel Tower or the Pacific Ocean. Such expressions are sometimes described as having constant reference. Others have their references totally dependent on context. Expressions like I, you, she, etc. are said to have variable references. Lastly, sometimes a reference may be expressed by more than one sense. For instance, both ‘evening star’ and ‘morning star’(晚星,启明星), though they differ in sense, refer to Venus.Chapter 6 Language and cognition1.What is Cognition?In psychology it is used to refer to the mental processes of an individual with particular relation to a view that argues that the ming has internal mental states and can be understood in terms of information processing.Another denefition is mental process or faculty of knowing, including awareness, perception, reasoning, and judgment.2.Cognitive LinguisticsCognitive linguistics is the scientific study of the relation between the way we communicate and the way we think.It is an approach to language that is based on our experience of the world and the way we perceive and conceptualize it.3.What are the differences between metaphor & metonymy? Give some examples. Metaphor is a conceptual mapping(概念映射), not a linguistic one, from one domain to another (从一个语域到另一个语域), not from a word to another.Metonymy is a cognitive process in which one conceptual entity, the vehicle(源域), provides mental access to another conceptual entity, the target(目标域), within the same domain. The reference point activates the target.1.Metaphor is used for substitution, while metonymy is used for association.2. Metaphor can mean condensation and metonymy can mean displacement.3. A metonymy acts by combining ideas while metaphor acts by suppressing ideas.4. In a metaphor, the comparison is based on the similarities, while in metonymy thecomparison is based on contiguity.--For example, the sentence ‘he is a tiger in class’ is a metaphor. He re the word tiger is used in substitution for displaying an attribute of character of the person. The sentence ‘the tiger called his students to the meeting room’ is a metonymy. Here there is no substitution; instead the person is associated with a tiger for his nature..Metaphor is actually a cognitive tool that helps us structure our thoughts and experiences in the world around us..Metaphor is a conceptual mapping(概念映射), not a linguistic one, from one domain to another(从一个语域到另一个语域), not from a word to another.Metonymy(换喻,转喻).It is a cognitive process in which one conceptual entity, the vehicle(源域), provides mental access to another conceptual entity, the target(目标域), within the same domain.2.Psycholinguistics is the study of psychological aspects of language; it usually studies the psychological states and mental activity with the use of language.Language acquisition (1) Holophrastic stage(单词句阶段)–Language’s sound patterns–Phonetic distinctions in parents’ language.–One-word stage: objects, actions, motions, routines.2) Two-word stage: around 18m3) Three-word-utterance stage4) Fluent grammatical conversation stageChapter 7 Language, culture and society1.the relationship between language and thought?Generally, the relation of L to C is that of part to whole, for L is part of C.The knowledge and beliefs that constitute a people’s culture are habitually encoded and transmitted in L.There exists a close relationship between language and culture. This is evidenced by the findings of anthropologists such as Malinowski, Firth, Baos, Sapir and Whorf. The study of the relation between language and the context in which it is used is the cultural study of language.2.What’s Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis? Give your comment on it.Edward Sapir (1884 - 1939) and Benjamin Lee Whorf (1897-1941)Our language helps mould our way of thinking and, consequently, different languages may probably express speakers’unique ways of understanding the world.Linguistic determinism: L may determine our thinking patterns.Linguistic relativity: a. Similarity between language is relative; b. the greater their structural differentiation is, the diverse their conceptualization of the world will be.Chapter 8 Language in usePragmatics: The study of language in use and the study of meaning in context, as well as the study of speakers’ meaning, utterance meaning& contextual meaning..What’s your understanding of conversational implicature? Use one or two examples to discuss the violation of its maxims.People do not usually say things directly but tend to imply them. CP is meant to describe whatactually happens in conversation. People tend to be cooperative and obey CP in communication. Since CP is regulative, CP can be violated. Violation of CP and its maxims leads to conversational implicature.1.What are the main differences between pragmatics and semantics?Semantics and pragmatics are both linguistic studies of meaning. The essential difference lies in whether in the study of meaning the context of use is considered. If it is not, the study is restricted to the area of traditional semantics; if it is, the study is carried out in the area of pragmatics.Semantics studies sentences as units of the abstract linguistic system while pragmatics studies utterances as instances of the system.The former stops at the sentence level; the latter looks at bigger chunks of conversation. The former regards sentences as stable products; the latter treats utterances as dynamic processes. The former analyses sentences in isolation; The latter analyses utterances in close connection with their contexts of situation.2. What does pragmatics study? How does it differ from traditional semantics?答: Generally speaking, pragmatics is the study of meaning in the context. It studies meaning in a dynamic way and as a process. In order to have a successful communication, the speaker and he arer must take the context into their consideration so as to affect the right meaning and intention. T he development and establishment pragmatics in 1960s and 1970s resulted mainly from the expan sion of the study semantics. However, it is different from the traditional semantics. The major diff erence between them lies in that pragmatics studies meaning in a dynamic way, while semantics st udies meaning in a static way. Pragmatics takes context into consideration while semantics does n ot. Pragmatics takes care of the aspect of meaning that is not accounted for by semantics.3. What are the four maxims of the CP? Try to give your own examples to show how flouting these maxims give rise to conversational implicature?答: Cooperative Principle, abbreviated as CP. It goes as follows:Make your conversational contribution such as required at the stage at which it occurs by the ac cepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged.To be more specific, there are four maxims under this general principle:(1) The maxim of quantity① Make your contribution as informative as required (for the current purpose of the exchange) . ② Do not make your contribution more informative than is required.(2) The maxim of quality① Do not say what you believe to be false.② Do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence.(3) The maxim of relation Be relevant.(4) The maxim of manner① Avoid obscurity of expression. ② Avoid ambiguity.③ Be brief (avoid unnecessary prolixity).④ Be orderly.Chapter 9 Language and literature1.What is ‘foregrounding’?In a purely linguistic sense, the term ‘foregrounding’is used to refer to new information, in contrast to elements in the sentence which form the background against which the new elementsare to be understood by the listener / reader.In the wider sense of stylistics, text linguistics, and literary studies, it is a translation of the Czech aktualisace (actualization), a term common with the Prague Structuralists.The English term ‘foregrounding’has come to mean several things at once:-the (psycholinguistic) processes by which - during the reading act - something may be given special prominence;-specific devices (as produced by the author) located in the text itself. It is also employed to indicate the specific poetic effect on the reader;-an analytic category in order to evaluate literary texts, or to situate them historically, or to explain their importance and cultural significance, or to differentiate literature from other varieties of language use, such as everyday conversations or scientific reports.Literal language and figurative language-A language is called literal when what is meant to be conveyed is same as what the word to word meaning of what is said. In contrast the figurative language, the words are used to imply meaning which is other than their strict dictionary meaning.-Literal language refers to words that do not deviate from their defined meaning. Figurative language refers to words, and groups of words, that exaggerate or alter the usual meanings of the component words. Figurative language may involve analogy to similar concepts or other contexts, and may involve exaggerations. These alterations result in figures of speech.Chapter 11 LinguisticsApplied linguistics: is the study of the relation of linguistics to foreign language teaching, of the ways of applying linguistic theories to the practice of foreign language teaching. Universal Grammar:is a theory in linguistics that suggests that there are properties that all Possible natural human languages have. Usually credited to Noam Chomsky, the theory suggests that some rules of grammar are hard-wired into the brain, and manifest themselves without being taught. There is still much argument whether there is such a thing and what it would be. Syllabus: a syllabus is a specification of what take place in the classroom,which usually contains the aims and contents of teaching and sometimes contains suggestions of methodology. Interlanguage: the type of language constructed by second or foreign language learners who are still in the process of learning a language is often referred to as interlanguage.contrastive analysis: A way of comparing L1 and L2 to determine potential errors for the purpose of isolating what needs to be learned and what not. Its goal is to predict what areas will be easyto learn and what will be difficult. Associated in its early days with behaviorism and structuralism. the Input Hypothesis: according to krashen's input hypothesis, learners acquire language as a result of comprehending input addressed to them.Chapter 12 Theories & schools of modern linguisticsTransformational-Generative GrammarThe five stages of development of TG Grammar:1) The classical theory (1957)2) The standard theory (1965)3) Extended standard theory4) GB/PP theory (1981)5) The Minimalist ProgramInnateness hypothesis: Chomsky believes that language is somewhat innate, and that children are born with what he calls a Language Acquisition Device(LAD), which is a unique kind of knowledge that fits them for language learning.CHOMSKY’S TG GRAMMAR DIFFERS FROM THE STRUCTURAL GRAMMARIN A NUMBER OF WAYS1. Rationalism2. innateness 3 deductive methodology4 emphasis on interpretation 5formalization 6.emphasis on linguistic competence 7. strong generative powers 8.emphasis on linguistic universals。
英语语言学一、名词解释第一课1.Synchronic共时性: S aid of an approach that studies language at a theoretical “point” in time.\ A kind of description which takes a fixed instant (usually, but not necessarily, the present), as its point of observation. Most grammars are of this kind.ngue语言: The abstract linguistic system shared by all members of a speech community.nguage: Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbol used for human communication.4.Arbitrariness任意性:One design feature of human language, which refers to the face that the forms of linguistic signs bear no natural relationship to their meaning.第二课1.Phoneme音位:2.Allophone音位变体:3.Minimal pair最小对立体:第三课1.Morphology形态学:which words are formed.2.Derivational morphemes class of words are called…3.Inflectional morphemes第四课1.Syntax语法句法:classes,4.Surface to the final syntactic form of the sentence which results from第五课1.Reference指称: Reference means what a linguistic form refers to in the real, physical world; it deals with the relationship between the linguistic element and the non-linguistic world of experience.2.Homonymy同音异义: Homonymy refers to the phenomenon that words having different meanings have the same form, i.e. different words are identical in sound or spelling, or in both.3.Hyponymy 上下义关系: Hyponymy refers to the sense relation between a more general, more inclusive word and a more specific word.第六课1.Pragmatics语用学: Pragmatics can be defined as the study of how speakers of a language use sentences to effect successful communication.2.Utterance话语: a sentence as what people actually utter in the course of communication.3.Utterance meaning话语意义: Utterance is based on sentence meaning; it is realization of the abstractmeaning of a sentence in a real situation of communication, or simply in a context.4.Illocutionary act言外行为: An illocutionary act is the act expressing the speaker’s intention; it is the act performed in saying something.二、简答题第一课1.What are the major branches of linguistics? What does each of them study?Phonetics: The study of sounds used in linguistic communication. It describes individual speech sounds and indicates their physical or phonetic properties.Phonology:It studies the ways in which these sounds form patterns and systems and how they work to convey meaning in the system of language.Morphology: A field of linguistics focused on the study of the forms and formation of words in a language Syntax: A set of rules that govern how words are combined to form phrases and sentences.Pragmatics: the study of the use of language in a social context.2.language?The important characteristicssystematic, arbitrary and vocalFirst of all,language in a wrong way.3.1) Arbitrariness:2)Productivity:provides and forunderstanding novel messages.3) Duality:4)5)第二课1.语音学和音位学的研究中心有何不同?语音学家和音位学家哪一个更关心清晰音的区别?为什么?Phonetics — description of all speech sounds and their find differences.Phonology — description of sound systems of particular languages and how sounds function to distinguish meaning.A phonetician would be more interested in such differences cos such differences will not cos differences inmeaning.2. What is phone? How is it different from a phoneme? how are allophones related to a phoneme?Phone is a phonetic unit, it has no meaning.Phoneme is a phonological unit with distinctive value .The phoneme /l/ can be realized as dark/l-/and clear/l/,which are allophones of the phoneme /l/Allophones---actual realization of a phoneme in different phonetic contexts.第三课1. Think of three morpheme suffixes, give their meaning and specify the types of stem they may be suffixed to. Give at least two examples of each.Suffix: -ingMeaning: denoting a verbal action, an instance of this, or its resultStem type: added to verbsExamples: fighting: denote the action of battlebuilding: denote the action of constructionSuffix: -ableMeaning: able to beStem type: added to verbsExamples: avoidable: able to be prevented fromSuffix: -ist2. Think of three morpheme be1)prefix: un-meaning:once more; afresh; anewstem type: added to verbsexamples: restart: start once morereaccustom: accustom (someone) to something again第五课1. What are the major types of synonyms in English?并举例1)dialectal synonyms-----synonyms used in different regional2)Stylistic synonyms: synonyms differing in style3)Synonyms that differ in their emotive or evaluative meaning4)Collocational synonyms: what words they go together with5)Semantically different synonyms: differ from the words themselves2. Explain with examples “homonymy”, “polysemy”, and “hyponymy”.Homonymy: Homonymy refers to the phenomenon that words having different meanings have the same form, i.e., different words are identical in sound or spelling, or in both. When two words are identical in sound, they are homophones. When two words are identical in spelling, they are homographs. When tow words are identical in both sound and spelling, they are complete homonyms. The examples are as followed:Homophones: rain/reign night/knight piece/peaceHomographs: bow v./bow n. tear v./tear n.Complete homonyms: fast adj./fast v.Polysemy: while different words may have the same or similar meaning, the same one word may have more than one meaning. This is what we call polysemy, and such a word is called a polysemic word. The1.2.3.4.5.6.Hyponymyare called its hyponyms. For example,第六课答:way to have a successful communication, the speaker and hearer must take the context so as to effect the right meaning and intention. The development andand 1970s resulted mainly from the expansion of the study semantics.traditional semantics. The major difference between them lies in thattakes context into consideration while semantics does not. Pragmatics takes care of the aspect of meaning that is not accounted for by semantics.2. What are the five types of illocutionary speech acts Searle has specified? What is the illocutionary point of each type?答:(1) representatives: stating or describing, saying what the speaker believes to be true(2) directives: trying to get the hearer to do something(3) commissives: committing the speaker himself to some future course of action(4) expressives: expressing feelings or attitude towards an existing(5) declarations: bringing about immediate changes by saying somethingThe illocutionary point of the representatives is to commit the speaker to something's being the case, tothe truth of what has been said, in other words, when performing an illocutionary act of representative, the speaker is making a statement or giving a description which he himself believes to be true. Stating, believing, sweating, hypothesizing are among the most typical of the representatives.Directives ate attempts by the speaker to get the hearer to do some- thing. Inviting, suggesting, requesting, advising, wanting, threatening and ordering are all specific instances of this class.Commissives are those illocutionary acts whose point is to commit the speaker to some future course of action, i.e. when speaking the speaker puts himself under a certain obligation. Promising, undertaking, vowing are the most typical ones.The illocutionary point of expressives is to express the psychological state specified in the utterance. The speaker is expressing his feelings or attitudes towards an existing state of affairs, e.g. apologizing, thanking, congratulating.The last class “declarations” has the characteristic that the successful performance of an act of this type答:Make your conversational(1) The maxim of quantity①②(2) The maxim of quality①②(3) The maxim of relationBe relevant.①②③④(】。
语言学复习重点 High quality manuscripts are welcome to downloadC h a p t e r1绪论1. What is linguistics 什么是语言学Linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.It studies not any particular language, but languages in general.2. The scope of linguistics 语言学的研究范畴The study of language as a whole is often called general linguistics. (普通语言学)The study of sounds, which are used in linguistic communication, is called phonetics. (语音学)The study of how sounds are put together and used in communication is called phonology. (音系学)The study of the way in which morphemes are arranged to form words are called morphology.(形态学)The study of how morphemes and words are combined to form sentences is called syntax. (句法学)The study of meaning in language is called semantics. (语义学)The study of meaning in context of use is called pragmatics. (语用学)The study of language with reference to society is called socio-linguistics. (社会语言学)The study of language with reference to the working of mind is called psycho-linguistics. (心理语言学)The study of applications (as the recovery of speech ability) is generally known as applied linguistics. (应用语言学) But in a narrow sense, applied linguistics refers to the application of linguistic principles and theories to language teaching and learning, especially the teaching of foreign and second language.Other related branches include anthropological linguistics, (人类语言学) neurological linguistics, (神经语言学) mathematical linguistics, (数字语言学)and computational linguistics. (计算机语言学)3. Some important distinctions in linguistics语言学研究中的几对基本概念Prescriptive and descriptive 规定与描写If a linguistic study describes and analyzes the language people actually use, it is said to be descriptive, if it aims to lay downrules to tell people what they should say and what they should not say, it is said to be prescriptive.Modern linguistics differs from traditional grammar. Traditional grammar is prescriptive while modern linguistics is descriptive. The task of linguists is supposed to describe the language people actually use, whether it is “correct” or not.Synchronic and diachronic 共时和历时The description of a language at some point in time is a synchronic study; the description of a language as it changes through time is adiachronic study. In modern linguistics, synchronic study is more important.Speech and writing 口头语与书面语Speech and writing are the two major media of communication. Modern linguistics regards the spoken form of language as primary, but not the written form. Reasons are: 1. Speech precedes writing; 2. There arestill many languages that have only the spoken form; 3. In terms of function, the spoken language is used for a wider range of purposes than the written, and carries a larger load of communication than the written.Langue and parole 语言和言语The Swiss linguist F. de Saussure made the distinction between langue and parole early 20th century.Langue refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community, and parole refers to the realization of langue in actual use. Saussure made the distinction in order to single out one aspect of language for serious study. He believes whatlinguists should do is to abstract langue from parole, to discover the regularities governing the actual use of language and make them the subjects of study of linguistics.Competence and performance 语言能力和语言运用Proposed by American linguist N. Chomsky in the late 1950’s.He defines competence as the ideal user’s knowledge of the rules of his language, and performance the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication. He believes the task of the linguists is to discover and specify the language rules.is language 语言的定义Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.Sapir uses “ideas” “emotions” and “desires” in his definition. Hall, like Sapir, treats language as a purely human institution. Chomsky’s definition is quite different, it focus on the purely structural properties of languages and to suggest that these properties can be investigated from a mathematically precise point of view.5. Design features 语言的甄别性特征Design features refer to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication. American linguist Charles Hockett specified twelve design features, five of which will be discussed here.Arbitrariness 语言的随意性Arbitrariness means that there is no logical connection between meanings and sounds. It is not entirely arbitrary.Example: different sounds are used to refer to the same object in different languages.Productivity 语言的创造性Language is productive in that it makes possible the construction and interpretation of new signals by its users. This is why they can produce and understand an infinitely large number of sentences, including sentences they have never heard before.Duality 语言的二重性The duality nature of language means that language is a system, which consists of two sets of structure, or two levels, one of sounds and the other of meaning.Displacement 语言的移位性Displacement means that language can be used to refer to things which are present or not present, real or imagined matters in the past, present, or future, or in far-away places.Cultural transmission 语言的文化传递性While human capacity for language has a genetic basis, ., we were born with the ability to acquire language, the details of any language are not genetically transmitted, but instead have to be taught and learned anew. This indicates that language is culturally transmitted. It is passed down from one generation to the next through teaching and learning, rather than by instinct.Chapter 2 Phonology 音系学1. The phonic medium of language 语言的声音媒介Speech and writing are the two media used by natural languages as vehicles for communication. Of the two media of language, speech ismore basic than writing. Speech is prior to writing. The writing system of any language is always “invented” by its users to record speech when the need arises.For linguists, the study of sounds is of greater importance than that of writing.The limited ranges of sounds which are meaningful in human communication and are of interest to linguistic studies are the phonic medium of language (语言的声音媒介) . The individual sounds within this range are the speech sounds (语音).2.What is phonetics什么是语音学Phonetics is defined as the study of the phonic medium of language;It is concerned with all the sounds that occur in the world’s languages.语音学研究的对象是语言的声音媒介,即人类语言中使用的全部语音。
语言学考试复习重难点Chapter one Introduction一、定义1.语言学LinguisticsLinguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.2.普通语言学General LinguisticsThe study of language as a whole is often called General linguistics.3.语言languageLanguage is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.语言是人类用来交际的任意性的有声符号体系。
4.识别特征Design FeaturesIt refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication.语言识别特征是指人类语言区别与其他任何动物的交际体系的限定性特征。
Arbitrariness任意性Productivity多产性Duality双重性Displacement移位性Cultural transmission文化传递⑴arbitrarinessThere is no logical connection between meanings and sounds.P.S the arbitrary nature of language is a sign of sophistication and it makes it possible for language to have an unlimited source of expressions⑵ProductivityAnimals are quite limited in the messages they are able to send.⑶DualityLanguage is a system, which consists of two sets of structures ,or two levels.⑷DisplacementLanguage can be used to refer to contexts removed from the immediate situations of the speaker.⑸Cultural transmissionHuman capacity for language has a genetic basis, but we have to be taught and learned the details of any language system. this showed that language is culturally transmitted. not by instinct. animals are born with the capacity to produce the set of calls peculiar to their species.5.语言能力CompetenceCompetence is the ideal user’s knowledge of the rules of his language.6.语言运用performancePerformance is the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication.语言运用是所掌握的规则在语言交际中的体现。
f45英语语言文学基础知识摘要:1.英语语言基础知识2.英语文学基础知识3.实用英语学习技巧4.提高英语语言文学能力的建议正文:一、英语语言基础知识1.语法:掌握英语的基本语法规则,如名词、动词、形容词、副词等词性的用法,以及句子的结构和解构。
2.词汇:积累常用的英语词汇,了解词义、词性以及词组的搭配,逐步扩大词汇量。
3.发音:学习并掌握英语发音规则,提高口语表达能力。
4.拼写:熟悉英语单词的拼写规律,纠正常见的拼写错误。
二、英语文学基础知识1.文学流派:了解不同历史时期的文学流派,如现实主义、浪漫主义、现代主义等。
2.文学作品:阅读经典英语文学作品,了解作品背景、作者生平以及作品的主题和风格。
3.文学术语:学习文学批评和分析的基本术语,如象征、比喻、拟人等。
4.文学奖项:了解世界著名的文学奖项,如诺贝尔文学奖、普利策奖等。
三、实用英语学习技巧1.制定学习计划:根据自己的实际情况,制定合理的学习计划,确保学习效果。
2.多媒体辅助学习:利用网络资源和手机应用,进行听、说、读、写的综合训练。
3.练习题库:做大量的练习题,巩固所学知识,提高应试能力。
4.学习小组:加入英语学习小组,与他人分享学习心得,共同进步。
四、提高英语语言文学能力的建议1.坚持每天学习:养成良好的学习习惯,保持学习的连续性和稳定性。
2.大量阅读:阅读英语文章、书籍,提高阅读速度和理解能力。
3.口语实践:积极参加英语角、语言交换等活动,提高口语实际应用能力。
4.学习与实践相结合:将所学知识运用到实际生活和工作场景中,实现学以致用。
通过以上四个方面的学习和实践,相信大家的英语语言文学能力会得到显著提高。
语言学Linguistic各章重点,学习资料整理1.1What is language?Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.1.2Design features of language①Arbitrariness任意性:The property of language by which there is in general no natural (i。
e。
logical)relation between the form of a single lexical unit and its meaning。
②Duality二重性Language consists of two levels of structures. The lower (secondary)level is a definite set of meaningless sounds, which combine to form meaningful units which constitute a higher (primary) level。
③Creativity创造性Language is creative in the sense that its users can understand and produce sentences they have never heard before。
④Displacement移位性By displacement is meant that language can be used to refer to things that are not present (in time and space)at the moment of communication。
1.3Functions of language①Informative信息功能Language serves an informative function when it is used to express the speaker’s opinion, to state a fact,or to reason things out。
英语语言学概论期末复习English Linguistics Overview Final ReviewIntroduction:1. Phonetics:Phonetics deals with the physical sounds of human speech. It examines speech sounds, their production, transmission, and perception. It includes articulatory phonetics (how sounds are produced), acoustic phonetics (how sounds are transmitted), and auditory phonetics (how sounds are perceived).2. Phonology:Phonology focuses on the systematic organization of sounds in a particular language. It studies phonemes—the smallest unit of sound that can distinguish meaning—and phonological rules, which determine how sounds interact in a language. It also explores the distribution of sounds, syllable structures, and phonological processes like assimilation and vowel harmony.3. Morphology:4. Syntax:Syntax explores the structure of sentences and the rulesthat govern their formation. It analyzes the arrangement of words, phrases, and clauses to create well-formed sentences.Syntax also investigates sentence constituents, grammatical relations, word order, and sentence types.5. Semantics:6. Pragmatics:7. Sociolinguistics:Sociolinguistics explores the relationship between language and society. It investigates how language varies and changes based on social factors such as gender, age, social class, and geographical location. Sociolinguistics also examines language attitudes, language variation, language contact, and dialectology.8. Psycholinguistics:Conclusion:。
期末考试语言学复习范围2:名词解释复习范围language,speech community, bilingualism, semantics, context, locutionary act, language acquisition, phonology, psycholinguistics, langue, phoneme, culture, intercultural communication, linguistics, phonetics, competence,interlanguage, neurolinguistics, sense, morphology3:术语翻译都选自教材最后的glossary;4:简答题复习范围(主要限定在第一章、第五章、第六章、和第十章)1.Is modern linguistics mainly synchronic or diachronic? Why?2.What are the major branches of linguistics? What does each of them study?3.What makes modern linguistics different from traditional grammar?4.What is sense and what is reference? How are they related?5.What does pragmatics study? How does it differ from traditional semantics?6.According to Austin, what are the three acts a person is possibly performing while making an utterance? Give an example.7.What are the three variables that determine register? Interpret them with an example.8.In what way is componential analysis similar to the analysis of phonemes into distinctive features?9.What are the major types of synonyms in English?10.What are the five design features of language specified by C. Hockeet to show that human language is essentially differentfrom any animal communication system?11.What are the four major views concerning the study of meaning?12.Why is the notion of context essential in the pragmatic study of linguistic communication?13.What are the four maxims of the Cooperative Principle (CP)? List their names and explain them briefly.14.To what extent is second language learning similar to first language learning? Can you list some proof from your ownlearning experience?15.What is the Critical Period Hypothesis (CPH) concerning language acquisition?16.Explain the definition:“Linguistics is the scientific study of language”.17.What are suprasegmental features? Use examples to illustrate your points.18.What is grammaticality? Is a grammatically meaningful sentence necessarily a semantically meaningful sentence?19.How are “sentence” and “utterance” and “sentence meaning” and “utterance meaning” related and how d o they differ?20.What distinction, if any, can you draw between bilingualism and diglossia?Ⅰ.For each question, there is only ONE correct answer. Choose the one from A, B, C and D.1.Displacement benefits human beings by giving them the power to handle____A. arbitrariness and creativityB. generalizations and abstractionsC. interpersonal relationshipD. performative functions2. Using language for the sheer joy of using it shows that language has a ____ function.A. recreationalB. metalingualC. informativeD. performative3. According to_____, the task of a linguist is to determine from the data of performance the underlying system of rules that has been mastered by the language user.A. Roman JacobsonB. Leonard BloomfieldC. Kenneth PikeD. Noam Chomsky4. Whose Cardinal V owel system is still in use?A. A.J. EllisB. A.M. BellC. Daniel JonesD. A. C. Gimson5. Which of the following words involves“nasalization”?A. rapB. readC. roseD. running6. Which of the following words is likely to have stress in sentences?A. aB. andC. toD. sun7. “_______” is the abstract unit underlying the smallest unit in the lexical system of a language.A. WordB. LexemeC. MorphemeD. Vocabulary8. Word Class is known as in traditional grammar as _______.A. ConstructionB. parts of speechC. inflectionD. categories9. Which of the following are NOT prefixes?A. paraB. disC. irD. ion10._________is NOT included in the studies of traditional grammar.A. Classifying words into parts of speechB. Defining the properties of sentencesC. Identifying the functions of wordsD. Recognizing certain categories, like number and tense11. “Concord” has the same meaning as_____A. perfectiveB. progressiveC. agreementD. government12. Which of the following is NOT related to Noam Chomsky?A. Deep StructureB. Surface StructureC. Transformational ComponentD. Theme and Rheme13. The “semantic triangle” was proposed by______A. Plato and AristotleB. Ogden and RichardsC. Chomsky and HalleD. Leech and Palmer14. Which of the following are NOT converse antonyms?A. clever: stupidB. boy: girlC. give: receiveD. teacher: student15. “ I can refer to Confucius even though he was dead 2000 years ago.” This shows that language has the design feature of ________A. arbitrarinessB. creativityC. DualityD. Displacement16. “Don’t end a sentence with a preposition.” This is an example of _____ rules.A. prescriptiveB. descriptiveC. transformationalD. functional17. According to G.B. Shaw’s ridicule of English orthography, the non-existed word ghoti can be pronounced in the same way as______A. goatB. hotC. fishD. floor18. Which of the following is the correct description of [v]?A. voiceless labiodental fricativeB. voiced labiodental fricativeC. voiceless labiodental stopD. voiced labiodental stop19. “New elements are not to be inserted into a word even though there are several parts in a word.” This is known as ________A. uninterruptibilityB. stabilityC. extremityD. variability20. Which of the following word class is the closed-class?A preposition B. adverb C. adjective D. noun21. Which of the following are NOT suffixesA. inB. iseC. lyD. ful22. Traditional grammar sees a sentence as _________A. a sequence of morphemesB. a sequence of clausesC. a sequence of wordsD. a sequence of phrases23. _________meaning is concerned with the relationship between a word and the thing it refers to.A. ConnotativeB. DenotativeC. AffectiveD. Reflective24. Which of the following are gradable antonyms?A. good---badB. male----femaleC. alive----deadD. buy-----sell25. The fact that sounds are used to refer to the same object in different languages proves the ________of language.A. dualityB. creativityC. arbitrarinessD. displacement26. Which of the following are correct descriptions of Langue and Parole?A. It was Chomsky that distinguished langue from parole.B. It was Martin Joo that distinguished langue from parole.C. Langue constitutes the immediately accessible data.D. The linguist’s proper object is the langue of each community.27. The distinction between vowels and consonants lies in ________.A. the manners of articulationB. the places of articulationC. the position of the soft palateD. the obstruction of airstream28. When the different forms, such as tin and din, are identical in every way except for one sound segment which occurs in the same place in the strings, the two sound combinations are said to form_______A. allophonesB. a minimal pairC. a maximal pairD. phonemes29. The process of word formation in which a verb, for example, blacken, is formed by adding–en to the adjective black, is called_____A. inflectionB. derivationC. compoundD. backformation30. The sense relation between rose and flower is _________A. synonymB. polysemyC. hyponymyD. homonymy31.Which of the following are NOT instances of blending?A. transistorB. classroomC. boatelD. brunch32. The one that is NOT one of the suprasegmental features is ________A. syllableB. stressC. coarticulationD. intonation33. What the element”-es”indicates is third person singular, present tense, and the element “-ed”past tense, and “-ing”progressive aspect. Since they are the smallest unity of language and meaningful, they are also called_______A. phonemesB. phonesC. allophonesD. morphemes34. The term“_______”in linguistics may be defined as a way of referring to the approach which studies language change over various periods of time and at various historical stages.A. synchronicB. diachronicC. comparativeD. historical comparative35. Since early 1990s, Noam Chomsky and other generative linguists proposed and developed a theory of universal grammar known as the _______theoryA. speech actB. TGC. minimalist programD. principles-and- parametersII Decide whether the following statements are true(T) or false (F) .1.Arbitrariness means you can use languages in any way you like.(F)2.“Radar” is an invented word.(F)3.The consonant [x] existed in Old English.(T)4.Today, we normally say that English has two tenses: present and past.(T)5.Leech’s conceptual meaning has two sides: sense and reference.(T)6.Historical linguistics is a synchronic study of language.(F)7. A good method to determine the phonemes in a language is the Minimal Pairs Test.(T)8.Phonology is concerned with speech production and speech perception.(F)9.Leech uses the term “connotative” in the same sense as that in philosophical discussion.(F)10.Duality is the physical manifestation of the “ infinite use of finite terms”(T)11.The idea of a system of cardinal vowels was first suggested by Danniel Jones.(T)12.Word is the smallest unit of meaning which can constitute, by itself, a complete utterance.(T)Ⅲ. Fill in each blank with ONE word.1. There are two aspects to meaning: denotation and connotation .2. Phonology is the branch of theoretical linguistics concerned with speech sounds at a higher level thanPholotics i.e. their structure and organization in human languages.3. The fact that a word may have more than one meaning is called___ in semantics.4. There are at least 4 design features of language: Arbitrariness, , __________, and ___________5 Relational antonyms are pairs in which one describes a relationship between two objects and the otherdescribes the same relationship when the two objects are reversed, such as parent and child, teacher and student.6 antonyms are pairs that express absolute opposites, like mortal and immortal.7. F.de Saussure , founder of modern linguistics, taught linguistics in Geneva University during 1907-1911.His theory has put great influence on semiotics, humanities study and literary studies.8. Lexical semantics is concerned with the meanings of words and the meaning among words; and phrasal or semantics is concerned with the meaning of syntactic units larger than the word.9. Reference theory in semantics holds the viewpoint that there is a___direct__ relation between forms of language and those the relevant language forms refer to.10.Nominalism refers to the idea that there is no conventional relation or link between the words that people choose and the objects that the words refer to. That is to say, language is .11. Complementery antonyms are pairs that express absolute opposites, like mortal and immortal.12. 荀子(约公元前298~前238)在《正名篇》中说,“名无固宜,约之以命。
语言教学设计Lecture 1Language and LearningUnit 1 Language and LearningMain concerns:⏹Views on language⏹Views on language learning⏹What is a good language teacher, and how can one become such?1.1 How do we learn language?Task 1 on pp. 1-2⏹How many foreign languages can you speak?⏹Did you find learning a foreign language easy?⏹What difficulties did you experience? Why?⏹Which skill did you find more difficult to learn?⏹Did you focus on knowledge or skills? Why?⏹Why did you learn the foreign language(s)?⏹Did you find it interesting to learn the foreign language(s)?⏹What were your most common learning activities?⏹Did you like the way you learned the foreign language(s)? Conclusions of the task⏹People learn a foreign language for different reasons;⏹People learn languages in different ways;⏹People have different understandings about language learning; and⏹People have different capabilities in language learning.1.2 Views on languageThe answer to the question ‘What is language?’ is the basis for: syllabus design,teaching methods,teaching procedures, and teaching techniques .A definition of language is always,implicitly or explicitly, a definition ofhuman beings in the world. Raymond WilliamsLanguage is a purely human andnon-instinctive method of communicatingideas, emotion and desires by means ofvoluntarily produced symbols. Edward Sapir⏹A set (finite or infinite) of sentences,each finite in length and constructed out ofa finite set of elements. Noam ChomskyThe institution whereby humanscommunicate and interact with each otherby means of habitually usedoral-auditory arbitrary symbols. R.A. Hall⏹David Crystal:The systematic, conventional use ofsounds, signs, or written symbolsin a human societyfor communication and self-expression.Task 2 (p. 2)What is language?Sample definitions of “language” (p. 177)Language:⏹is a system/set of symbols;⏹is (primarily) vocal;⏹is arbitrary and conventional;⏹consists of a set of rules (and is rule-governed);⏹is related to culture;⏹is used for human communication or interaction.It can be defined in three ways :⏹it is a finite system of sound units which are combined according to a certain order (a syntax) in order to form an infinite amount of information;it is an arbitrary system of symbols; a word is arbitrarily linked to an object ;it is a system that lets us express current events as well as real and imaginary ones be they in the past, present or future Three different viewsof language⏹The structural view,⏹The functional view,⏹The interactional viewThe structural viewThe structural view sees language as a linguistic system.The system of language = the system of sounds + the system of words + the system of grammar The structural viewSystemofLanguage3 sub-systemsThe structural viewThe structural viewThe functional view(The functional-notional view)The functional view sees language asa linguistic systemand asa means for doing things.Functions of languagee.g.⏹offering,⏹suggestion,⏹advising,⏹apologizing,⏹etc.To perform functions, rules and vocabulary are needed to express notions.Notionse.g.⏹present time, past time, and future time;⏹certainty and possibility;⏹agent and instrument;⏹relationship between people and objectsThe interactional viewThe interactional view sees language asa communicative tool(to build up and maintain relations between people).Two things are needed for communication:⏹Rules of language form (grammar & vocabulary)⏹Rules of language use in a context (Is it appropriate to use this language item in this context?)Views on the nature of language have an impact on the teaching/learning method of a person.1.3 Views on language learningViews on language learning involve two questions:⏹What are the psycholinguistic and cognitive processes of language learning?⏹What are the conditions for the learning processes to be activated?⏹The Process-oriented theories and⏹The Condition-oriented theoriesThe Process-oriented theoriesThe Process-oriented theories concern how the mind processes new information.e.g.⏹habit formation,⏹induction,⏹making inference,⏹hypothesis testing,⏹generalizationThe Condition-oriented theoriesThe Condition-oriented theories concern the nature of the human and physical context in which language learning takes place.e.g.⏹number of students,⏹what kind of input learners receive,⏹learning atmosphereThe Behaviourist theoryandThe Cognitive theoryThe Behaviourist theory⏹Watson an Raynor:a stimulus-response theory of psychologyThe Behaviourist theoryAccording to the theory:Forms of bebaviour such as motions, habits, etc. are seen as elements that can be observed and measured.The Behaviourist theory⏹“You can train an animal to do anything (within reason) if you follow a certain procedure which has three major stages, stimulus, response, and reinforcement.”(Harmer. 1983:30)The Behaviourist theoryThe Behaviourist theory⏹Skinner: Language is also a form of behaviour.⏹USA: The Audio-Lingual Method (the “listen-and-rep eat” drilling activities). Mistakes were immediately corrected.The Cognitive theoryChomsky’s question:If all language is a learned behaviour, how can a child produce a sentence that has never been said by others before?e.g.五岁女孩:“中国队加油!外国队漏油!”(2005.05.05晚上9:30)The impact of Chomsky’s theory on language teaching➢One influential idea is that students should be allowed to create their own sentences based on their understanding of certain rules.➢This idea is clearly in opposition to the Audio-Lingual Method.1.4 What isa good language teacher?kind, dynamic, authoritative, speaking clearly, creative, patient, well-informed, hardworking, resourceful (having the ability to find a way round the difficulty), attentive, warm-hearted well-prepared, flexible, intuitive, accurate, enthusiastic, humourous, caring, disciplined, professionally-trained (Parrot. 1993)1.5 How can one become a good language teacher? Teaching: is it a craft, or is it an applied science?⏹If we take teaching as a craft, then we would believe that a novice teacher can learn the profession by imitating the experts’ techniques, just like an apprentice.⏹If we take teaching as an applied science, then we would believe that knowledge and experimentation are necessary.A compromise between the two views by Wallace (1991)⏹Stage 1: Language training⏹Stage 2: 3 sub-stages: 1) learning; 2) practice; 3) reflection⏹Stage 3: Goal (professional competence)⏹What does the double arrow between Stage 1 and Stage 2 mean?⏹In which stage does this course take place?⏹Why are Practice and Reflection connected by a circle? Summary of Unit 1⏹Views on language⏹The structural view, the functional view, and the interactional view⏹Views on language learning⏹The Process-oriented theories and the Condition-oriented theories⏹The Behaviourist theory and the Cognitive theory⏹Qualities of a good language teacher⏹Ethic devotion, professional quality, and personal style⏹The three stages of becoming a good language teacherEnd of Unit 1Thank you!CommunicativePrinciples and ActivitiesCommunicative Language Teaching (CLT)Framework of this lecture:➢Language use in real life v.s. traditional pedagogy;➢Communicative competence;➢The implementation of language skills;➢Communicative activities.2.1 Language use in real lifevs.traditional pedagogy⏹The ultimate goal of foreign language teaching is:to enable the learners to use the foreign language in work or life⏹Therefore, we should teach: that part of the language that will be used; in the way that is used in the real world.Gaps between the use of language in real life and the traditional foreign language teaching pedagogy: (pp. 14-15) ⏹In real life: ?⏹The traditional pedagogy: ?⏹The consequence: ?⏹Task 1.⏹In real life: Language is used to perform certain communicative functions.⏹The traditional pedagogy: focuses on forms rather than on functions.⏹The consequence: The learners have learned a lot of sentences or patterns, but they are unable to use them appropriately in real social situations.⏹In real life: We use all skills, including the receptive skills and the productive skills.⏹The traditional pedagogy tends to focus on one or two language skills and ignore the others.⏹The consequence: The learners cannot use the language in an integrated way.⏹In real life: Language is always used in a certain context. ⏹The traditional pedagogy tends to isolate language from its context. e.g. the passive⏹The consequence:The students are puzzled about how to use the language in a particular context.2.2 Fostering communicative competenceThe goal of CLT is to develop students’communicative competence.Communicative Competence vs. Linguistic Competence⏹Linguistic Competence =grammatical knowledge orknowledge about the language form⏹Communicative Competence =Knowledge & ability for: rules of form/grammar + rules of useLanguage competence and communicative competencea. Chomsky’s theory: competence simply means knowledge of the language system: grammatical knowledge in other wordsb. Hymes’s theory: “there are “rules of use without which the rules of grammar would be useless”. Besides grammatical rules, language use is governed by rules of use, which ensure that the desired or intended functions are performed and the language used is appropriate to the context.According to Hymes (1979), communicative competence includes four aspects: (pp. 15-16)⏹knowing whether or not something is formally possible (grammaticality: grammatically acceptable); 知道形式上是否可能⏹knowing whether something is understandable to human beings (feasibility);知道是否可行⏹knowing whether something is in line with social norms (appropriateness in a social context);知道是否得体⏹knowing whether or not something is in fact done (what the language performance entails).知道实施的条件To sum up⏹communicative competence included four aspects: grammatically acceptableunderstandablesocial normsactually useCommunicative Competence includes knowledge/awareness of:⏹when to say⏹where to say⏹to whom to say⏹what to say⏹how to sayFeatures of CLT (p. 16)⏹CLT stresses the need to allow students opportunities for authentic and creative use of the language;⏹CLT focuses on meaning rather than on form;⏹CLT suggests that learning should be relevant to the needs of the students;⏹CLT advocates task-based language teaching (TBLT);⏹CLT emphasizes a functional approach to language learning and culture awareness of the target language.1. authentic and creative2. meaning rather than form3. relevant to the needs4. task-based teaching5. functional approachRichards and Rodgers’ (1986:72) three principles of CLT (p.16)⏹Communicative principle;⏹Task principle;⏹Meaningfulness principle2.3 The implementation of language skillsThe translation of communicative competence in language teaching practice is to develop the learners’ skills, namely, listening, speaking, reading and writing.In listening and speakingStudents should have the chance to listen to and produce what is meaningful, authentic, unpredictable, and reactive if ever possible.⏹In traditional pedagogy, listening and speaking were treated as skills different from what takes place in reality.⏹Therefore, listening and speaking skills need to be redefined in terms of the real communicative use.⏹Students should have the chance to listen to and produce what is meaningful, authentic, unpredictable, and creative if ever possible.In reading⏹Since communicative courses focus on meaning rather than on form, the reading skill is redefined to focus on the purpose of reading.⏹Traditionally the purpose of reading is to learn language, namely vocabulary, grammar, etc., and reading is regarded as a process of decoding, structural analysis, etc.⏹In CLT, reading is to extract the meaning or the messages, and the students use different skills, e.g. skimming and scanning (see Unit 10), for different reading purposes.In writing⏹students should make the writing more meaningful and authentic, that is to practice writing to express their own feelings or describe their own experience.⏹In CLT, students have the chance to write to express their own feelings or describe their own experiences, thus making the practice of writing meaningful and authentic.In short, CLT has expanded the area:➢Language content (to incorporate functions);➢Learning process (cognitive style and information processing); and➢Product (language skills).2.4 Communicative activitiesLittlewood (1981):➢Functional communicative activities;➢Social interactional activities.Littlewood. 1981.Communicative Language Teaching.Cambridge University Press. Functional communicative activities (p. 18)e.g. Identifying pictureslanguage for the activity:⏹What colour …?⏹How many …?⏹Where …?Social interactional activities(pp. 18-19)e.g. Role-playing through cued dialogues⏹Reading and writing are also communicative skills which are worth no less attention than listening and speaking.Rod Ellis’ (1990) six criteria for communicative act ivities •Communicative purpose; (information gap) •Communicative desire; (real need)•(Focus on ) Content, not form; (message)•Variety of language; (not just one language form, free to improvise/create)•No teacher intervention; (done by Ss; no correcting/evaluating how Ss do it; assessment is based on the ‘product’ or on communicative purpose rather than on the language.)•No material control.For examples please refer to Wang Qiang’s book (2000) pp. 20-23Summary of CLT⏹Gaps between the use of language in real life and the traditional foreign language teaching pedagogy;⏹Goal of CTL: Communicative competence;⏹Features of CLT, and Richards and Rodgers’ three principles of CLT:◆communicative, task and meaningfulness principles⏹Communicative activities (Littlewood):◆functional communicative activities, and◆social interactional activities⏹Rod Ellis’ six criteria for communicative activitiesEnd of CLTThank you!Goal:Exchanging personal informationInput:Questionnaire on sleeping habitsActivity: 1) Reading questionnaire2) Asking and answeringquestions about sleeping habits Teacher role: Monitor and facilitatorto specify what is regarded assuccessful completion of the taskLearner role:Conversational partnerSetting:Classroom / pair workThe components of a task:目标(Goals)信息输入( Input Data) 语言信息( Verbal data )非语言信息(Non-verbal data ) 活动 (Activities ) 结果 (Outcome)语言结果( Verbal outcome )非语言结果(Non-verbal outcome )Task or exercises?• The learner will listen to an aural text of weatherforecast and answer questions afterwards on whether given statements are true or false.• The learner will listen to a weather forecast, identifythe predicted maximum temperature for the day and give suggestions as to what to wear.Good learning tasks should:1 enable learners to manipulate and practice specific features of language2 allow learners to rehearse, in class, communicative skills they will need in the real world3 activate psychological/psycholinguistic processes of learning4 be suitable for mixed ability groups5 involve learners in solving a problem, coming to a conclusion6 be based on authentic or naturalistic source material7 involve learners in sharing information8 require the use of more than one macro-skill9 allow learners to think and talk about language and learning10 promote skills in learning how to learn11 have clear objectives stating what learners will be able to do as a result of taking part in the task 12 utilize the community as a resource13 give learners a choice in what way they do and the order in which they do it.14 involve learners in risk-taking15 require learners to rehearse, rewrite and polish initial efforts 16 enable learners to share in the planning and development of the task17 have built into them a means of evaluating the success or otherwise of the task•Besides CLT, there has been another language teachingapproach which has become more and more popular from late 1980s, that is, Task-based Language Teaching (TBLT).1.1•A task is a piece of work undertaken for oneself or for others, freely or for some reward. In other words, ‘task’ means the what people do in everyday life, at work, at play, and in between.’ (Long, 1985: 89; via Nunan, 1989:5) 1.2 A task is an activity or action which is carried out as the result of processing or understanding language ( i.e. as a response). (Richards, Platt and Weber 1986:289) 任务=人们在学习、理解、体会语言之后所开展的活动。
1. Define the following terms.1)structureIt consists of the way in which the words are organized into phrases and the phrases are organized into larger phrases.2)grammarIt is the process of describing the structure of phrases and sentences in such a way that we account for all the grammatical sequences in a language and rule out all the ungrammatical sequences; or can be defined as the study of phrases and sentences structure.3)structural ambiguityIt happens when two distinct underlying interpretations are represented differently in deep structure. There are two different underlying structures with the same surface structure.4)deep structureIt is an abstract level of structural organization in which all the elements determining structural interpretation are represented.5)SyntaxIt deals with how sentences are constructed with words.2. Draw the phrase structure tree for the sentence "Bill ran to the park slowly."Bill ran to the park slowly.3. Draw two different phrase structure trees to illustrate the ambiguity involved in the sentence" I once shot an elephant in my pajamas.” Under each tree write the way to understand the sentence embodied by the tree.I once shot an elephant in my pajamas.I once shot an elephant, and the elephant was in my pajamas.I once shot an elephant in my pajamas.I once shot an elephant when I was wearing my pajamas.4. Draw two different phrase structure trees to illustrate the ambiguity involved in "tall boys and girls." Under each tree write the way to understand the phrase embodied by the tree.tall boys and girls.Both boys and girls are tall.tall boys and girls.Only the boys are tall.5. Define the following terms.1) semanticsSemantics is the study of meaning in human language.2) lexical gapLexical gap is the absence of a word in a particular place in a semantic field of a language. 3) semantic rolesSemantic role is a way of categorizing the relation between a sentence’s parts and the event that it describes. to categorize the relation between a sentence’s parts and the event that it describes.6. Define the approaches to meaning and state their problems.1) meaning as naming:the meaning of an expression is what it refers to.Problem: it is not always immediately clear what is being named. What do conjunctions like but and and refer to? What do prepositions like for and to stand for? What do we say about names for imaginary objects or actions? The concert word tree can stand for a particular tree or any tree or all trees in the world.2) meaning as concept:expressions mean the concept or idea associated with them. Any particular sound image is psychologically associated with a particular concept.Prob: To state that meaning is a concept does not overcome all the problems that the naming theory has. We can still ask what are the concepts that and or but stand for?3) meaning as behaviour:a STIMULUS (S) produced a linguistic response (r), which works as a stimulus (s), and results in a non-linguistic response (R). The meaning of a linguistic form is defined as observable behaviours.Prob: Since the practical stimulus S is not always obvious, so how do we identify it?4) meaning as context:meaning is found in the context within which a particular expression is uttered. It suggests thatwe can derive meaning from, or reduce it to, the observable context.Prob: What are we actually observing in a context?5) meaning as truth conditions:the sense of a declarative sentence permits you to know under what circumstances a sentence is true. Those circumstances are called “truth conditions” of the sentence. The truth conditions of a declarative sentence are the same as the sense of the sentence. Knowing the meaning of a sentence is the same as knowing the conditions under which the sentence is true or false.Prob: This approach limits semantics to being concerned principally about meaning in relation to truth and falsehood. How can we discuss the meaning of interrogatives and imperatives?7. Define the seven types of meaning with one example for each.1) Conceptual meaning:what words denote or refer to.It can be studied in terms of contrastive features or binary feature format.e.g. man: [ +HUMAN +ADULT +MALE] woman: [+HUMAN +ADULT +FEMALE]2) Connotative meaning:the communicative value that a word or a combination of words has by virtue of what it refers to, over and above its purely conceptual meaning.e.g. dragon in Western countries means an evil monster, but in China it refers to an auspicious animal.3)Social meaning:the meaning which an expression conveys about the contexts or social circumstances of its use.e.g. larceny, used in court of law, is of French origin; theft, used in informal settings, is of Anglo-Saxon origin. There is no real difference in conceptual meaning. The differences have to do with levels of formality.4) Affective meaning:the level of meaning that conveys the language user’s feeling, including his attitude or evaluation in shaping his use of language.e.g. statesman indicates a wise and respected political leader, while politician refers to someone who is good at taking advantage of different conditions in an organization.5) Reflective meaning:the meaning which arises in cases of multiple conceptual meanings, when one sense of a word forms parts of our response to another sense.e.g. nuclear family6) Collocative meaning:the associations a word gets because of the meanings which tend to occur in its linguistics context.e.g. clear could mean free from complications (as in a clear case), free from guilt (as in a clear conscience) or clear from clouds (as in a clear sky).7) Thematic meaning:meaning that arises out of the way in which the writer or speaker organizes his message.e.g. an active sentence has a different meaning from its passive equivalent although in conceptual meaning they seem to be the same.8. What are the differences between less marked and more marked terms in the same semantic field?1) The less marked members of a semantic field will usually be easier to learn and remember than more marked members.2) A less marked word consists of only one morpheme, in contrast to more marked words.3) The less marked member of a semantic field cannot be described by using the name of another member of the same set, while more marked members can be thus described.4) Less marked terms tend to be used more frequently than more marked terms.5) Less marked terms are broader in meaning than more marked terms.6) Less marked words are not the result of the metaphorical usage of the name of another object or concept, whereas more marked words often are.9. Use contrastive features to illustrate the conceptual meanings of the words "boy","girl", "mare" and "stallion".boy: [+HUMAN -ADULT +MALE]girl: [+HUMAN -ADULT +FEMALE]mare: [+ANIMAL +HORSE -MALE +ADULT]stallion: [+ANIMAL +HORSE +MALE +ADULT]10. Identify the difference between homonymy and polysemy. Make sure you include examples.HOMONYMY is words that have the same linguistic forms but are different in meaning, e.g. bank (of a river)- bank (financial institution); while POL YSEMY is one world which has two or more meanings that are related conceptually or historically, e.g. foot.11. Identify the difference between hyponymy and meronymy. Make sure you include examples.HYPONYMY is when a word is a member of the denotation of another word, e.g. Potato is a hyponym of vegetable ; while MERONYMY is when a word is a part of the denotation of another word, e.g. wheel, door, window, etc. are all meronyms of car.12. Define semantic roles with one example for each.1)Agent:the responsible initiator of an action; the entity that performs an actione.g. David washed the dishes.2) Patient:the entity that undergoes a certain change of state; the entity that undergoes the effect of some action.e.g. The sun melted the ice.3) Experiencer:the entity that experiences a physical or mental sensation; the one that receives a sensory input.e.g. John likes blueberry pancakes.4) Instrument:the means by which an action is performed or something comes aboute.g. They signed the treaty with the same pen.5) Cause:any natural force that brings about a change of statee.g. The snow caved in the roof.6) Recipient:the entity that receives a physical objecte.g. He sold me this camera.7) Benefactive:the entity for which an action is performed.e.g. They baked me a cake.8) Locative:the location of an action or state.e.g. The band performed in a park.9) Temporal:the time at which the action or state occurred.e.g. She left home yesterday.13. Define semantic relationships between sentences with one example for each.1) Entailment:when the truth of one sentence guarantees the truth of another sentence. In terms of truth value: when a is true, b is necessarily true; when b is false, a is false; when b is true, a may be true or false.e.g. a: That person is a bachelor.b: That person is a man.2) Presupposition:the assumption or belief implied by the use of a particular word or structure. When a is true, bis necessarily true; when a is false, b is still true; when b is true, a can be either true or false; when b is false, no truth value can be said about a.e.g. a. John’s son is an engineer.b. John has a son.3) Paraphrase:two sentences have the same meaning.e.g. a: I gave the book to John.b: I gave John the book.4) Contradiction:two sentences have contradict meaninge.g. a: Charles is a bachelor.b: Charles is married.5) Implicature:when one sentence can be concluded from another sentencee.g. Speaker 1. I’d like a cup of coffee.Speaker 2: There’s a place around the corner called Joe’s.14. Define the following concepts.Pragmatics is the study of what speakers mean, or “speaker meaning”. It is the study of language in use.Micropragmatics is the study about the mechanisms by which speakers/writers encode their message in skilful ways and how hearers/readers arrive at the intended meaning in spite of the differences between the literal meaning and the intended meaning.e.g. I was waiting for the bus, but he just drove by without stopping.15. Define speech acts and classify.Speech acts: the acts people perform by using language.1) Locutionary act: the act of saying, the literal meaning of the utterance.2) Illocutionary act: the extra meaning of the utterances produced on the basis of its literal meaning.3) Perlocutionary act: the effect of the utterance on the hearer depending on specific circumstances16. Classification of illocutionary acts1) Representatives:speech acts stating that the speaker is committed to the truth of a statement. e.g. statements of fact, assertions, conclusions and descriptions.e.g. The earth is flat.2) Directives:speech acts that the speaker uses to get the hearer to do something. e.g. commands, orders, requests, suggestions, begging and pleading.e.g. Could you le n t me a pen, please?3) Commissives:speech acts that the speaker uses to commit himself to some future action. e.g. promises, threats, refusals and pledges.e.g. I’ll be back.4) Expressives:utterances stating that the speaker expresses an attitude about the situation. e.g. pleasure, pain, likes, dislikes, joy or sorrow.e.g. I’m really sorry.5) Declarations:those utterances that the speaker uses to change a situation.e.g. Jury foreman: We find the defendant guilty.17. Sentence forms & speech act18. Common Speech Acts & its Function19. Indirect speech acts1) QuestionsDirecta: Did John marry Helen?b. I ask you whether or not John married Helen.Indirecta. I don’t know if John married Helen.b. I would like to know if John married Helen.c. Do you know if John married Helen?2) RequestsDirecta: Please take out the garbage.b. I request that you take out the garbage.Indirecta. The garbage isn’t out yet.b. Could you take out the garbage?c. Would you mind taking out the garbage?d. I would like for you to take out the garbage.。
第一章绪论1.1什么是语言1.2语言的性质(1)语言具有系统性(systematic )(2)语言是一个符号系统语言符号是一种象征符号。
(3)语言符号的任意性(arbitrariness )与理据性(motivation )(4)口头性(5)语言是人类特有的(6)语言是用于交际的寒暄交谈(phatic communion )马林诺夫斯基提出的,认为语言除了用于表达思想、交流感情外,还可以用语言营造一种气氛或保持社会接触。
这种不用于表达思想、交流感情的语言使用,叫寒暄交谈。
1.3语言的起源1.4语言的分类1.4.1系属分类(Genetic Classification )历史比较语言学通过比较各种语言在不同时期语音、词性、曲折变化、语法结构上的相同特点来建立语言族系。
将语言分为语系(family )——语族(group )——语支(branch )——语言英语、德语属印欧语系日耳曼语族西日耳曼语支。
法语属印欧语系罗曼语族中罗曼语支。
汉语属汉藏语系汉语族。
1.4.2 类型分类(Typological Classifacation )根据词的结构类型,可分为(1)孤立语(isolating isolating languagelanguage )又叫词根语,一个词代表一个意思,缺少形态变化,语序和虚词是表达语法意义的主要手段。
汉语是典型的孤立语。
(2)粘着语(agglutinative language )简单词组成复合词,而词性和意义不变。
在词根前、中、后粘贴不同的词缀实现语法功能。
日语、韩语、土耳其语是典型的黏着语。
(3)屈折语(inflectional inflectional languagelanguage )词形变化表语法关系的语言。
英语是不太典型的屈折语。
(4)多式综合语(polysynthesis polysynthesis languagelanguage )把主、宾和其它语法项结合到动词词干上以构成一个单独的词,但表达一个句子的意思。
英语语言学语言学知识点语言学是一门研究语言的学科。
它涵盖了多个领域,包括语音学、语法学、语义学、语用学和语言变化等。
下面将简要介绍一些语言学的重要知识点。
一、语音学(Phonetics)语音学是研究语音的学问。
它关注语音的产生、传播和感知等方面。
在语音学中,语音被分为音素(phoneme)和音位(allophone)。
音素是语言中最小的语音单位,可以在语言中起到区分意义的作用。
而音位是相同意义的不同实现方式,即同一音素的不同发音形式。
在语音学中,还有一些重要概念,如元音(vowel)和辅音(consonant)。
元音是语音学中最基本、最重要的音类,它们的发音不受任何阻塞或摩擦的干扰。
而辅音则需要通过口腔或喉头的阻塞或摩擦才能产生。
二、语音语调学(Phonology)语音语调学是研究语音和语调现象的学问。
它研究语音和语音的组织方式和相互关系。
在语音语调学中,音位和音位组成规则是核心概念之一、音位组成规则决定了在一个语言中哪些音位可以成为合法的音节。
此外,在语音语调学中还有音变(phonological variation)的概念。
音变指的是在其中一种语言中,一个特定音位的发音方式会随着不同的语音环境而发生变化的现象。
音变是语言变化的一种重要表现。
三、语法学(Grammar)语法学是研究语言的结构和规则的学问。
在语法学中,句子是一个重要的研究对象。
句子结构可以划分为短语(phrase)和句子成分(sentence constituents),如名词短语、动词短语和介词短语等。
语法学还涉及到句子的成分顺序和组成规则。
在语法学中,句法树(syntactic tree)是一种图形表示方式,用于描述句子的结构。
句法树由句子的各个成分和它们之间的关系构成。
四、语义学(Semantics)语义学是研究词汇和句子意义的学问。
它关注词语和句子的语义性质、意义的产生机制以及词义的转换等。
在语义学中,可以通过语义角色(semantic role)和逻辑关系(logical relation)来描述词语和句子之间的关系。
一.Antonymy (反义词):(书本P70)1.Gradable antonyms (分程度反义词):a matter of degree.eg. Old—middle-aged—young hol-warm-coldplementary antonyms (互补关系):a matter of degree between two extremes.eg. Alive― ead; male一female3.relational opposites (关系反义词):pairs of words that exhibit the reversal of a relationshipbetween the two items.eg. father-son; teacher-pupil; doctor-patient; buy-sell; above-below二、Paul Grice (保罗•格莱斯)提出的两个概念(书本P86)1.conventional implicature (规约含意,约定俗成的):is based on the conventional meaningof certain words in the language・eg. He is rich blit he is not greedy.2.particularized conversational implicature (特殊规约隐涵):is inferred by the hearer withreference to the context of communication.eg. A: Where is the steak? B: The dog looks very happy.三、Charles Hockett (霍凯特)提出的人类语言的识别特征之一(书本P8)Arbitrariness (I膛总:t生):There is no logical connection between meanings and sounds・ eg. Rumble, crash, cackle, bang四.Free morpheme (可独立存在的):a morpheme which can be a word by itself.eg. boy (书本P33)五、新构词(书本P99)1.blending (拼缀,紧缩法):a blend is a word formed by combining parts of other words,eg. Smog -一smoke+fog; motel——motor+hotel2.acronyms (首字母缩写,词首字母缩略法):are words derived from the initials of severalwordseg. IT-——information technology; CPI——consumer price index六.Language aptitude (语言能力倾向,语言学能):the natural ability for learning a second language.(书本P164)七、Semantic Changes (语意变化):(书本P102)1.semantic broadening (扩展,意思越来越广,语义扩大化)2.semantic narrowing (意思变小)3.semantic shift (转换)八.indirect speech act (间接言语行动):which aimed to explain indirect language in the light of the speech act theory.(书本P84-85)1.The primary speech act is the speaker's goal of communication while the secondaryspeech act is the means by which he achieves goal.2・ eg. A: Let's go to the movies tonight.B: I have to study for an exam. (冋答问题或者名词解释)九、Sapir-Whorf Hypotheis (假说):1. A theory put forward by the American anthropological linguists Sapir and Whorf whichstates that the way people view the world is determined wholly or partly by the structureof their native language・(书本P128)2・ Now there are mainly two different interpretations about the hypothesis: a strong version and a weak one. While the strong version believes that language patterns determinepeople's thinking and behavior, the weak one holds that former influences the latter.(全背)3・ eg. English-speaking culture tends to teach its people to name what is eful and important.4. A good illustration of this point is the word snow in Eskimo and English.十. Strategies for learning a second language?(书本P165)1.Find their own way,taking charge of their learning・anize information about language・3.Are creative,developing a "fbcT for the language by experimenting with its grammar andwords.4.Make their own opportunities for practice in using the language inside and outside theclassroo m.5・ Learn to live with uncertainly by not getting fluttered and by continuing to talk or listen without understanding every word.e mnemonics and other memory strategies to recall what had been learned・7.Make errors work for them and not against for them.e linguistic knowledge, including knowledge of their first language, in learning asecond language.e contextual cues to help them in comprehension.10.Learn to make intelligent guesses.11.Learn chunks of language as wholes and formalized routines to help them perform"beyond their competence^・12.Learn certain tricks that help to keep conversations going.13.Learn certain production strategies to fill in gaps in their own competence・14.Learn different style of speech and writing and learn to vary their language according tothe formality of the situatiori・H—> How to determine a word^s category?(书本P44)三个标准及分别的例子:1.Meaning2.infleclion3.distribution十二. Q: when ^conversation implicature occur?(书本P87)A:Only when a maxim is flouted(公然违抗).Flouting a maxin means violating blatantly ・十三、A phoneme is a phonological unit・ It is represented or realized by a certain phone in a certain phonetic context.(书本P23)十四. The description of a language at some point of time in history is a synchronic study. The description of a language as it changes through time is a diachronic study・(书本P4)十五、Krashen^ input Hypothesis (书本P163)(课本黑体字)Comprehensive input (全lif 白勺输入):i+1:i represents learners5current state of knowledge, the next stage is the i+1十六、what is morphological rules?(形态学规则)(书本P36)They are rules that govern which affix can be added to what type of stem to form a new word. 十七、what is interlanguage?(语际语,人工辅助语言,中介语)(书本P160)Proposed by S.Pit Corder and Larry Seiinker, the concept of interlanguage was established as learner's independent system of the second language, which is of neither the native language nor the second language, but a continuum or approximation from one extreme of his native language to the other of the second language・十八、What is acculturation^(语言文化移入,文化适应)(书本P135)A process of adapting to the culture and value system of the second language community. (可能考单词acculturation) intercultural communication(单词跨文化交际)十九、what is inflectional morphemes?(曲折语素;屈折词素;屈折性语素)(书本P36)Which are for the most part purely grammatical markers and signify such concepts as tense, number, case and so on.? ? ?eg. "John has noticed the change in his friend.” Here the -ed endings are morphemes which do not add any lexical meaning but represent the concept of tense and aspect.二十、what is roots?(词根)(书本P34)The root constitutes the core of the word and carries the major component of its meaning.Roots typically belong to a lexical category・二—、what is phrases?(短语)(书本P44)Syntactic units that are built around a certain word category・二十二- what is Wh Movement?(特殊疑问句)(书本P56)二十三、Sense relations between sentences (书本P71-72)(选择题一题)1.X is synonymous with Y 同义2.X is inconsistent with Y 彳:一致3.X entails Y (Y is an entailment of Y)包括4.X presupposes Y (Y is a prerequisite of X)先提条件5.X is a contradiction 矛盾6.X is semantically anomalous 反常的二十四、Pragmatics (ig用学),和语义学的最大区别?Context (书本P77-78)1.区别:What essentially distinguishes semantics and pragmatics is whether in the study ofmeaning the context of use is considered・2.总结最大区别:context二十五. Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication. (书本P7)二十六、Critical Period Hypothesis (CPH)关键期假说的主要思想(书本P147)(选择)The critical period hypothesis refers to a period in one's life extending from about two to puberty. (While the strong one suggests that children must acquire their first language by puberty or they will never be able to learn from subsequent exposurethe weak holds that lang uage learni ng will be more difficult and in complete after puberty.)二十七、what is a behaviorist view of language acquisition?(语言习得的行为主义主要观点是什么?)(书本P141)Traditional behaviorists view language as a kind of behavior and believe that language learning is simply a matter of imitation and habit formation.[An innatist view of language acquisition: Chomsky proposed that human beings are bom with an innate ability known as Language Acquisition Device, or LAD. Universal Grammar (UG)An interactionist view of language acquisition]二十八、what is bilingualism?(双语能力)(书本P122)Ability to speak two languages equally well.二十九、What is Spoonerism?(斯本内现象,首音互换)(书本P186)Transposition of initial consonants in a pair of words.eg. Wrong road―long road三十、What is Garden path sentences?(径句)(书本P186)A garden path sentence is an awkward sentence that misleads the syntactic parser and takes itdown the garden path to the wrong analysis.eg. The horse raced past the barn fell.。
Chapter 1 Introduction1.The definition of linguistics: Linguistics is the scientific study of language.Linguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.Firstly, in this definition, language means any language that wants to be referred, and study means a research. Why regard it as a scientific study because it is based on the systematic investigation of linguistic data, conducted with reference to some general theory of language structure.Secondly, it’s of great significance to realize the process of linguistic study.<1> The first thing linguists should to is to observe and collect language facts,which are found to display some similarities.<2> Then they make generalizations about the linguistic facts.<3> Then they formulate some hypotheses about the language structure in orderto account for the linguistic facts.<4> The hypotheses thus formed have to be checked repeatedly by furtherobservations.<5> They construct linguistic theories of language.We can conclude that Linguistics is the scientific study of language.2.The major branches of linguistics:Linguistics have six major branches: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics.Phonetics is a study of the speech of sounds and how they produced.Phonology is a study of how sounds are put together and used to convey meaning in communication.Morphology is a study of how words are formed out of small units.Syntax is a study concerned with the ways in which words can be combined together to form phrases and sentences.Semantics is a study of meanings of sentences.Pragmatics is a study of the use of language in communication, particularly the relationship between sentences and the contexts and situations in which they are used.The study of these six aspects of language forms the core of linguistics.3.Sociolinguistics: the studies of all theses social aspects of language and itsrelation with society form the core of the branch.Psycholinguistics: relates the study if language to psychology.Applied linguistics: refers to the study of applications4.Some distinctions in linguistics:Prescriptive and descriptivePrescriptive and descriptive represent two types of linguistic study. Modern linguistics is mostly descriptive.Synchronic and diachronicA diachronic study is a historical study; in modern linguistics, a synchronic over a diachronic one.Speech and writingSpeech and writing are two major media of communication.<1>From the point of view of linguistic evolution, speech is prior to writing.<2>In everyday communication, speech plays a greater role than writing in terms of the amount of information conveyed.<3>From modern linguists, spoken language reveals more true features of human speech while written language is only the “revised”record of speech. From the linguistic acquisition as a child, we first learn to speak.Langue and paroleThe distinction between langue and parole was made by the Swiss linguist F. de Saussure in the early 20th century.Competence and performanceThe distinction between competence and performance was made by American linguist N. Chomsky in the late 1950s.Traditional grammar and modern linguisticsIt is generally believed that the beginning of modern linguistics was marked by the publication of F. de Saussure’s book “Course in General Linguistics”.<1>Linguistics is descriptive while traditional grammar is prescriptive.<2>Modern linguistics focuses on the spoken language while traditional grammarians emphasize the written words in the language.<3>Modern linguistics does not force languages into a Latin-based framework, while traditional grammar sticks to Latin tradition.5.Why do we say language is primary vocal?Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.This definition has captured the main features of language.Language is a system, i.e. elements of language are combined according to rules. This explains why “iblk”is not a possible sound combination in English, and also why “Been he wounded has” is not a grammatically acceptable sentence in English.Language is arbitrary that there is no inherent connection between a linguistic symbol and what the symbol stands for. The fact that different languages have different words for the same object is a good illustration of the arbitrary nature of language. This also explains the symbolic nature of language: words are just symbols; they are associated with objects, actions, ideas and so on by convention.Language is vocal because the primary medium for all languages is sound. All evidence points to the fact that writing system came into being much later than the spoken forms and that they are only attempts to capture sounds and meaning on paper. The fact that children acquire spoken language before they can read or write also indicates that language is primarily vocal.6.What make language unique to human beginsDesign features distinguish human language from any animal system of communication. By comparing language with animal communication systems, we can have a better understanding of the nature of language. (American linguist Charles Hockett in 1960)ArbitrarinessProductivityDualityDisplacementCultural transmission7.Functions of language: descriptive function; expressive function; social functionChapter 2 Phonology1.Phonetics is defined as thet56 study of the phonic medium of language.2.Three branches of phonetics: articulatory phonetics; auditory phonetics; acousticphonetics3.P.20 distinguish which worlds are volicess or voliced4.English consonants can be classified in two ways: manner of articulation andplace of articulation.Chapter 3 Morphology1.Morphology: the part of the grammar that is concerned with word formation andinner word structure of words. (sentence structure)2.Open class words(content words): nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbsClosed class words(grammatical words or functional words):conjunctions, prepositions, articles and pronouns3.Morpheme: the minimal units of meaningWord: the smallest free formeg. How many morphemes in it?Anti-pollution: 3 (pollute-pollution-anti)Unimportant: 2 (important- unimportant)4.Free morpheme: morpheme which can be a word by itselfBound morpheme: a morpheme that must be attached to another formspound words P.38Chapter 4 Syntax1.Syntax is a branch of linguistics that studies the rules that govern the formation ofsentences.2.Word level categories are divided into two kinds: major lexical categories(Noun,Verb, Adjective, Preposition), minor lexical categories.3.Transformation: the yes-no question structures, head movementsChapter 5 Semantics1.Semantics is the study of meaning.(rang of study: words and sentences)2.Naming theory was proposed by the ancient Greek scholar Plato.3.Semantic triangle or triangle of significance was suggested by Odgen andRichards.THOUGHT/REFERRENCE(concept)SYMBOL/FORM(linguistic elements) PEFERENT(object)4. A representative of Contextualism is J.R.Firth. The Contextualism view wasfurther strengthened by Bloomfield(1933).( It somewhat close to contextualism, islinked with psychological interest.)5.Sense and reference are two terms often encountered in the study of meaning.Sense is concerned with the inherent meaning of a linguistic form, the collection of al its features; it is abstract and de-contextualized.Reference means what a linguistic form refers to in the real, physical world; it deals with the relationship between the linguistic element and non-linguistic world or experience.6.Synonymy refers to the sameness or close similarity of meaning. Synonyms referto the words that are close in meaning.Synonyms: dialectal synonyms, stylistic synonyms, synonyms that differ in their emotive or evaluative meaning, collocational synonyms, semantically different synonym7.Homonymy refers to the phenomenon that words having different meanings havethe same form, i.e. different words are identical in the sound or spelling, or in both.(homophones; homographs)8.Hyponymy refers to the sense relation between a more general, more inclusiveword and a more specific word (superordinate; hyponyms). Hyponymy is a relation of inclusion; in terms of meaning, the superordinate includes all its hyponyms.9.Antonymy is used for oppositeness of meaning. It’s divided into: gradableantonyms; complementary antonyms; relational opposites.10.Sense relations between sentences:X is synonymous with Y.X is inconsistent with Y.X entails Y. (Y is an entailment of X) The meaning of X is entailed in Y.X presupposed Y. (Y is a prerequisite of X)X is a contradiction.X is a semantically anomalous.11.This is parallel to the way a phoneme is analyzed into small components calleddistinctive features.12.Predication analysis: arguments, predicate. (Cautions: no the, single, capital)Chapter 6 Pragmatics1. Pragmatics is a meaning study of how speakers of a language use sentences to effect successful communication which is an essential process of conveying and understanding meaning in a certain context.2. The similarity and difference between pragmatics and semanticsThe differences between pragmatics and semantics have two points:Language should be studied as a self-contained, intrinsic system.Any serious study of language can’t afford to investigate the use of language and extra-linguistic factors were not to be considered.The similarity between pragmatics and semantics is that:The essential distinguishes pragmatics and semantics is whether in the study of meaning the context of use is considered3.T he similarity and difference between sentence meaning and utterancemeaning:Sentence meaning is the abstract, intrinsic property of the sentence itself. Utteran ce meaning is the concrete and context-dependent realization of the abstract meaning of a sentence in a real situation of communication or in a context.While the meaning of a sentence is abstract and decontextualized, that of an utterance is concrete and context-dependent.Utterance meaning is based on sentence meaning,it is the realization of the abstra ct meaning of a sentence in a real situation of communication, or simply in a context.3. Speech act theory is proposed and developed by British philosopher John Austin, who makes a distinction between constatives and performatives, also develops 3 acts: locutionary act, illocutionary act, perlocutionary act4. Searle’s classification of speech acts is proposed by American philosopher-linguist John Searle and develops five types of illocutionary acts: representatives/assertives, directives, commissives, expressives and declarations.。
外国语言总复习重点知识归纳一、语法知识1. 词类:- 名词:表示人、物、地点、概念等。
- 动词:表示动作、状态或存在。
- 形容词:修饰名词或代词。
- 副词:修饰动词、形容词、其他副词或整个句子。
- 代词:代替名词的词语。
- 介词:表示位置、方向、时间等关系。
- 连词:连接词语、短语或句子。
- 冠词:限定名词的词语。
2. 句型:- 简单句:由一个主语和一个谓语构成。
- 复合句:由一个主句和一个或多个从句构成。
- 并列句:由两个或多个独立的句子构成。
3. 时态:- 一般现在时:表示经常性、惯性或普遍真理。
- 现在进行时:表示正在进行的动作。
- 一般过去时:表示过去发生的动作或状态。
- 过去进行时:表示过去某个时间段内持续进行的动作。
- 将来时:表示将要发生的动作或存在的状态。
二、词汇知识1. 常用词汇:- 问候:你好、谢谢、再见等。
- 数字:一、二、三、十、百、千等。
- 日期:年、月、日、星期等。
- 家庭成员:爸爸、妈妈、兄弟、姐妹等。
2. 常用短语:- 介绍自己:你好,我叫……。
- 要求帮助:请问,你能帮我吗?- 表达喜好:我喜欢……。
- 提出建议:我建议……。
三、听力技巧1. 专注听力材料的主题和关键词。
2. 注意细节,如数字、时间、地点等。
3. 学会使用上下文推断不理解的词汇或句子。
4. 反复练听力,增强听力理解能力。
四、阅读技巧1. 预览全文,了解文章的结构和主题。
2. 寻找关键词和主旨句,掌握文章的要点。
3. 注意词汇和句子之间的逻辑关系。
4. 练速读和精读,提高阅读速度和理解能力。
五、写作技巧1. 建立良好的写作结构:引言、正文、结论。
2. 注意语法和标点符号的正确使用。
3. 使用丰富多样的词汇和句式。
4. 练写作,提高表达能力和思维逻辑性。
以上是外国语言总复习的重点知识归纳,希望对您的学习有所帮助。
英语语言学复习重点1Chapter one Introduction一、定义1.语言学LinguisticsLinguistics is generally defined as the scientific study of language.2.普通语言学General LinguisticsThe study of language as a whole is often called General linguistics.3.语言languageLanguage is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication.语言是人类用来交际的任意性的有声符号体系。
4.识别特征Design FeaturesIt refers to the defining poperties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication.语言识别特征是指人类语言区别与其他任何动物的交际体系的限定性特征。
Arbitrariness任意性Productivity多产性Duality双重性Displacement移位性Cultural transmission文化传递⑴arbitrarinessThere is no logical connection between meanings and sounds.P.S the arbitrary nature of language is a sign of sophistication and it makes it possible for language to have an unlimited source of expressions⑵ProductivityAnimals are quite limited in the messages they are able to send.⑶DualityLanguage is a system, which consists of two sets of structures ,or two levels.⑷DisplacementLanguage can be used to refer to contexts removed from the immediate situations of the speaker.⑸Cultural transmissionHuman capacity for language has a genetic basis, but we have to be taught and learned the details of any language system. this showed that language is culturally transmitted. not by instinct. animals are born with the capacity to produce the set of calls peculiar to their species.5.语言能力CompetenceCompetence is the ideal user’s knowledge of the rules of his language.6.语言运用performancePerformance is the actual realization of this knowledge in linguistic communication.语言运用是所掌握的规则在语言交际中的体现。
7.历时语言学Diachronic linguisticsThe study of language change through time. a diachronic study of language is a historical study, which studies the historical development of language over a period of time.8.共时语言学Synchronical linguisticsThe study of a given language at a given time.9.语言langueThe abstract linguistic system shared by all members of a speech community.10.言语paroleThe realization of langue in actual use.11.规定性PrescriptiveIt ai ms to lay down rules for ”correct” behavior, to tell people what they should say and what should not say.12.描述性DescriptiveA linguistic study describes and analyzes the language people actually use.二、知识点nguage is not an isolated phenomenon, it’s a s ocial activity carried out in a certain social environment by human beings.语言不是一种孤立的现象,而是人类在一定的社会环境下进行的一种社会活动。
2.几种观点和现象的提出者:⑴瑞士语言学家F.de Saussure F.de Saussure:Langue和parole的区别⑵U.S.A linguist N.Chomsky美国语言学家N.Chomskyin1950针对Saussure’s langue&parole提出Competence和performance⑶曾经对语言概念下过定义的语言学家Sapir---language is a purely human and non-instinctive method of communication ideas, emotions and desires by means of voluntarily produced symbols.Hall----language is the institution whereby humans communicate and interact with each other by means of habitually used oral-auditory arbitrary symbols.Chomsky---from now on I will consider language to be a set of sentences, each finite in length and constructed out of a finite set of elements.⑷U.S.A Linguist Charles Hockett美国语言学家Charles Hockett提出了语言的识别特征design features3.the word ’language’ preceded by the zero-article ,it implies that linguistics studies not any particular language.Language一词前不加冠词说明语言学家不只研究一种特定的语言。
4.in order to discover the nature of the underlying language system ,what the linguists has to do first if to study language facts.nguage is a complicated entity with multiple layers and facts, so it's hardly possible for the linguistics to deal with it all at once. 判断题6.Frist drew the attention of the linguists were the sounds used in languages.最先引起语言学家注意的是语言的发音。
三、问答题1.what are major branches of linguistics? what does each study?Phonetics----it’s defined as the study of the phonic medium of language, it’s concerned with all the sounds that occur i n the world’s languages.Phonology---the study of sounds systems—the inventory of distinctive sounds that occur in a language and the patterns into which they fall.Morphology---It’s a branch of a grammar which studies the internal structure of words and the rules by which words are formed.Syntax-------it's a subfield of linguistics that studies the sentence structure of a language.Semantics---It’s simply defined as the study of meaning in abstraction.Pragmatics---the study of meaning in context of words.Sociolinguistics—the study of language with reference to society. Psycholinguistics---the study of language with reference to the working of the mind. Applied linguistics---the application of linguistic principles and theories to language teaching and learning.2.why do we say language is arbitrary?Language is arbitrary in the sense that there is no intrinsic connection between the sounds that people use and the objects to which these sounds refer.The fact that different languages have different words for the same object is a good illustration of the arbitrary nature of language, it’s only our tacit agreement of utterance and concept at work and not any innate relationship bound up in the utterance.A typical example to illustrate the ‘arbitrariness’ of language is ‘a rose by any other name would smell as sweet’.3. what makes modern linguistics different from traditional grammar?Modern linguistics is descriptive, its investigations are based on authentic and mainly spoken language date.现代语言学是描述性的,其研究以确实可靠的、主要以口语形式的资料为基础。