Epistemology II
martes, 5 de noviembre de 2013
martes, 29 de octubre de 2013
...APPLIED LINGUISTICS...
1. Applied Linguistics is concerned with the systematic study of language structure, the acquisition of first and subsequent languages, the role of language in communication, and the status of language as the product of particular cultures and other social groups. (http://www.brocku.ca/humanities/departments-and-centres/applied-linguistics/about/what-is-applied-linguistics).
2. "[A]pplied linguistics is an area of work that deals with language use in professional settings, translation, speech pathology, literacy, and language education; and it is not merely the application of linguistic knowledge to such settings but is a semiautonomous and interdisciplinary . . . domain of work that draws on but is not dependent on areas such as sociology, education, anthropology, cultural studies, and psychology." (http://grammar.about.com/od/ab/g/appliedlinguisticsterm.htm).
3. One way I can answer this broad question is by considering the Applied Linguistic issues that currently interest me, namely how languages interact and what differences we might expect when the languages concerned are not related to each other. For example, the Hong Kong language policy seeks to develop people who are trilingual in Cantonese, Putonghua and English.
(http://www.cambridge.org/servlet/file/store7/item5633198/version1/Article_What%20is%20applied%20linguistics.pdf)
4. For me applied linguistics is related to metacognition and the reflexion process which all human beings have to cross in the way we learn a new language, I mean, it is related to acquisition and formal process in SLA and FLA. Applied linguistics recognize all the areas of English and it try to deep in those in order to find the origin or the correct process and complexity in acquiring a second language.
5. I would like to explore about
martes, 15 de octubre de 2013
...SOCIOLINGUISTICS...
1. I think the relationship between society and language is the important conection which has to be between both, I mean it is necesary to exist a language in a society because is the most important thing in order to communicate each others. so, it doesn´t matter if we communicate in an oral or written or corporal way, the important thing here is the language that is our code in each community or society.
2. Well because it depends on the costums of each community, I mean there aren´t the same needs in a place or region which is near the sea with other which is in the centre of the country and with a cold weather. So, for me it depends on the needs of each community and the costums of them.
3. I think everything affects the way we speak, the food, the weather, the music, everything changes according to the needs and the place of each group or community.
4. An accent is the way that particular person or group of people sound. It’s the way somebody pronounces words, the musicality of their speech, etc.
A dialect describes both a person’s accent and the grammatical features of the way that person talks.
(http://dialectblog.com/2011/01/28/dialect-vs-accent/)
5. An overt prestige dialect is generally one that is widely recognized as being used by a culturally dominant group. In England, this would be RP. In the US, the Midwestern standard.
A covert prestige dialect, on the other hand, is one that is generally perceived by the dominant culture group as being inferior but which compels its speakers to use it to show membership in an exclusive community. (http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20071106190328AAIeYQI)
Pidgin language is nobody's native language; may arise when two speakers of different languages with no common language try to have a makeshift conversation. Lexicon usually comes from one language, structure often from the other. Because of colonialism, slavery etc. the prestige of Pidgin languages is very low. Many pidgins are `contact vernaculars', may only exist for one speech event.
Creole is a language that was originally a pidgin but has become nativized, i.e. a community of speakers claims it as their first language. Next used to designate the language(s) of people of Caribbean and African descent in colonial and ex-colonial countries (Jamaica, Haiti, Mauritius, Réunion, Hawaii, Pitcairn, etc.) (http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/messeas/handouts/pjcreol/node1.html)
martes, 24 de septiembre de 2013
...SYNTAX...
Syntax: Is basically the structure of sentences. Sentences have to follow certain structural rules in order to make sense. You can’t just throw any words together to make a sentence! (https://sites.google.com/a/sheffield.ac.uk/all-about-linguistics/branches/syntax/what-is-syntax)
Grammar: is the system of a language. People sometimes describe grammar as the "rules" of a language; but in fact no language has rules. (http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/grammar-what.htm)
Parse tree: A concrete syntax tree or parse tree is an (ordered, rooted) tree that represents the syntactic structure of a string according to some formal grammar. In a parse tree, the interior nodes are labeled by non-terminals of the grammar, while the leaf nodes are labeled by terminals of the grammar. (http://www.princeton.edu/~achaney/tmve/wiki100k/docs/Parse_tree.html)
Noun phrase: a word or group of words that functions in a sentence as subject, object, or prepositional object. (http://oxforddictionaries.com/es/definicion/ingles_americano/noun-phrase)}
Verb phrase: a verb phrase is a syntactic unit that corresponds to the predicate. In addition to the verb, this includes auxiliaries, objects, object complements, and other constituents apart from the subject. (http://www-01.sil.org/linguistics/GlossaryOflinguisticTerms/WhatIsAVerbPhrase.htm)
Sentences: In simple terms, a sentence is a set of words that contain:
a subject (what the sentence is about, the topic of the sentence)a predicate (what is said about the subject) (http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/what-is-a-sentence.htm)
Determiners: are words like the, an, my, some. They are grammatically similar. They all come at the beginning of noun phrases, and usually we cannot use more than one determiner in the same noun phrase. (http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/adjectives-determiners.htm)
Adjective: An adjective modifies a noun or a pronoun by describing, identifying, or quantifying words. An adjective usually precedes the noun or the pronoun which it modifies. (http://www.writingcentre.uottawa.ca/hypergrammar/adjectve.html)
Adverb: An adverb is a word that tells us more about a verb. It "qualifies" or "modifies" a verb (The man ran quickly). (http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/adverb-what.htm)
Noun: A noun is a word used to name a person, animal, place, thing, and abstract idea. Nouns are usually the first words which small children learn. (http://www.writingcentre.uottawa.ca/hypergrammar/nouns.html)
Pronoun: A pronoun can replace a noun or another pronoun. You use pronouns like "he," "which," "none," and "you" to make your sentences less cumbersome and less repetitive. (http://www.writingcentre.uottawa.ca/hypergrammar/pronouns.html)
Prepositional phrase: A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or a pronoun. This noun or pronoun is called the “object of the preposition.” (http://www.infoplease.com/cig/grammar-style/prepositional-phrases-big-daddy-phrases.html)
Auxiliary verb: The most common auxiliary verbs are "be," "do," and "have", and you may also use these verbs on their own. You use "Will" and "shall" to express future time. (http://www.writingcentre.uottawa.ca/hypergrammar/auxvb.html)
Verb: The verb is perhaps the most important part of the sentence. A verb or compound verb asserts something about the subject of the sentence and express actions, events, or states of being. (http://www.writingcentre.uottawa.ca/hypergrammar/verbs.html)
martes, 17 de septiembre de 2013
...SEMANTICS...
1. Semantics is the branch of linguistics and logic concerned with meaning. there are a number of branches and subbranches of semantics, including formal semantics, which studies the logical aspects of meaning, such as sense, reference, implication, and logical form, lexical semantics, which study word meanings and word relations, and conceptual semantics, which studies the cognitive structure of meaning. So I think semantics is encharge about all meanigs that a word has depending on the context.(www.oxforddictionaries.com)
2.MEANING: The nonlinguistic cultural correlate, reference, or denotation of a linguisti form; expression.
well, if semantics is related to the meaning, I think this word is the most important here, because it is the base of what semantics is.
CONCEPT: an idea of something formed by mentally combining all its characteristics, or particulars; a contruct.
I think this word is related to semantics because after you got a meaning of a word, you can create your own meaning based on your context or situation.
REFERENT: The object or event to which a term or symbol refers.
as I said before, when you have a meaning, you can construct your own idea about the meaning you need, then you create a referent, I mean an image that let you think about that new word or concept or even meaning.
GRAMMATICAL MEANING: The meaning of an inflexional morpheme or of some other syntactic device, as word order.
Meanig have some categories, I think this is one of them, for that reason it is very important to understand the different ways that semantics define a word.
LEXICAL MEANING: The meaning of a based morpheme.
this is the category of meaning which is related to free morphemes, so other way to define a word by semantics.
DENOTATIVE: Havig the power of name or indicate something.
so, you can also name or denotate something in order to create a meaning.
CONNOTATIVE: Signifyng or suggestive of an associative or secondary meaning in addition to primary meaning.
I think it is a meaning that we can use in order to complement a meaning of a word.
METAPHOR: A figure of speech in which a term or phrase is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance.
It is an interesting way semantics uses to give different meanings as comparisons between things.
POLYSEMY: Diversity of meanings.
it is related about all the possible meanings that a word can have dependeing on the intenction and the context.
CONTEXT: The set of circumstances or facts that sorround a particular event, situation, etc.
So as I said before, semantics can give us different meaning of a word depending on the context, I mean the situation, the purpose, the consecuence...
martes, 10 de septiembre de 2013
... MORPHOLOGY...
1. Is the study of morphemes, obviously. morphemes are words, word sterms amd affixes, basically the unit of language one up from phonemes. Although they are often understood as units of meaning, they are usually considered a part of language´s syntax or grammar. It is specifically grammatical morphemes (www.webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/morphology.html).
the study of the strusture and form of words in language or a language, including infexion, derivation and the formation of compounds (www.thefreediccionary.com).
Is a field of linguistics focus on the study of the forms and formation of words in a language. A morpheme is the smallest indivisible unit of a language that retains meaning. The rules of morphology within a language tend to be relatively regular, so that if one sees the noun morphemes for the first time, for example, one can reduce that it is likely related to the word morpheme (www.wisegeek.org.
WORD
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DEFINITION
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EXAMPLE
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MORPHEME
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Is the smallest meaningful unit in grammar of a language.
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FREE MORPHEME
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BOUND MORPHEME
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PREFIX
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SUFFIX
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INFIX
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AFFIX
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DERIVATIONAL MORPHEME
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IFLECTIONAL MORPHEME
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