Ch1 What Is Language TK
Ch1 What Is Language TK
Ch1 What Is Language TK
What is Language?
• The ability to use language, perhaps more than any other attribute,
distinguishes humans from other animals
• Onomatopoeia:
• English cock-a-doodle-doo and Finnish kukkokiekuu
• English gobble gobble and Turkish glu-glu
• particular sound sequences seem to relate to a particular
concept such as English gl and the concept of sight:
• glare, glint, gleam, glitter, glossy, glance, glimpse
but there is also
• gladiator, glucose, glory, glutton, globe, etc.
Creativity of Linguistic Knowledge
• Every language has an infinite number of possible
sentences
• Teaching grammars assume the student already knows one language and
then compares the grammar of the new language to the one they already
know
• L1 =>L2
Language Universals
• Universal Grammar (UG) refers to the universal
properties that all languages share
• If children are born with UG, then they can acquire language
so quickly and easily because they already know the
universal properties of language and only need to learn the
specific rules of the language(s) they are acquiring
Sign Languages: Evidence for the
Innateness of Language
• Deaf children exposed to sign languages go through
the same stages of language acquisition as hearing
babies
• Bird songs are used to stake out territory and attract mates
• There is no evidence of internal structure in these songs, although
they may vary to express varying degrees of intensity
• Tail-wagging dance: food source is more than 60 feet from the hive
• If there are any special circumstances regarding the food source, the bee
cannot convey that information
Animal “Languages”
• Human language is fundamentally different from
animal communication systems
• Whorf claimed that the Hopi people do not perceive time in the same
way as speakers of European languages because the Hopi language
does make grammatical distinctions in tense
Language and Thought
• Linguistic relativism: a weaker form of the
hypothesis which claims that different languages
encode different categories which an influence a
speaker’s perceptions of the world