NATURE OF
LANGUAGE
Etymology
The etymology of
a word refers to its origin and historical development: that is, its earliest
known use, its transmission from one language to another, and its changes in
form and meaning. Etymology is also the term for the branch of linguistics that
studies word histories.
Methods used in Etymological study of
Language:
Etymologists apply a number of methods
to study the origins of words, some of which are:
Philological research. Changes in the
form and meaning of the word can be traced with the aid of older texts, if such
are available.
Making use of dialectological data. The form or
meaning of the word might show variations between dialects, which may yield
clues about its earlier history.
The comparative
method.
By a systematic comparison of related languages, etymologists may often be able
to detect which words derive from their common ancestor language and which were
instead later borrowed from another language.
The study of
semantic change.
Etymologists must often make hypotheses about changes in the meaning of
particular words. Such hypotheses are tested against the general knowledge of
semantic shifts. For example, the assumption of a particular change of meaning
may be substantiated by showing that the same type of change has occurred in
other languages as well.
Types of word origins:
Etymological
theory recognizes that words originate through a limited number of basic
mechanisms, the most important of which are borrowing (i.e., the adoption of
"loanwords" from other languages); word formation such as derivation
and compounding; and onomatopoeia and sound symbolism, (i.e., the creation of
imitative words such as "click").
While the origin
of newly emerged words is often more or less transparent, it tends to become
obscured through time due to sound change or semantic change. Due to sound
change, it is not readily obvious that the English word set is related to the
word sit (the former is originally a causative formation of the latter). It is
even less obvious that bless is related to blood (the former was originally a
derivative with the meaning "to mark with blood"). Semantic change
may also occur. For example, the English word bead originally meant
"prayer". It acquired its modern meaning through the practice of
counting the recitation of prayers by using beads.
English language:
English derives
from Old English (sometimes referred to as Anglo-Saxon), a West Germanic
variety, although its current vocabulary includes words from many languages.
The Old English
roots may be seen in the similarity of numbers in English and German, particularly seven/sieben, eight/acht,
nine/neun, and ten/zehn. Pronouns are also cognate: I/mine/me
ich/mein/mich;thou/thine/thee and du/dein/dich; we/wir us/uns; she/sie.
However, language change has eroded many grammatical elements, such as the noun
case system, which is greatly simplified in modern English, and certain
elements of vocabulary, some of which are borrowed from French. Although many
of the words in the English lexicon come from Romance languages, most of the
common words used in English are of Germanic origin. When the Normans conquered
England in 1066 (see Norman Conquest), they brought their Norman language with
them. During the Anglo-Norman period, which united insular and continental
territories, the ruling class spoke Anglo-Norman, while the peasants spoke the
vernacular English of the time. Anglo-Norman was the conduit for the
introduction of French into England, aided by the circulation of Langue d'oïl
literature from France. This led to many paired words of French and English
origin. For example, beef is related, through borrowing, to modern French
bœuf, veal toveau, pork to porc, and poultry to poulet. All these words,
French and English, refer to the meat rather than to the animal. Words that
refer to farm animals, on the other hand, tend to be cognates of words in other
Germanic languages.
For example swine/Schwein,
cow/Kuh, calf/Kalb, and sheep/Schaf. The variant usage has been explained
by the proposition that it was the Norman rulers who mostly ate meat (an
expensive commodity) and the Anglo-Saxons who farmed the animals. This
explanation has passed into common folklore but has been disputed.
English has
proven accommodating to words from many languages, as described in the
following examples. Scientific terminology relies heavily on words of Latin and
Greek origin. Spanish has contributed many words, particularly in the
southwestern United States. Examples include buckaroo from vaquero or
"cowboy"; alligator from el lagarto or "lizard"; rodeo and
savvy; states' names such as Colorado and Florida. Cuddle, eerie, and greed
come from Scots; albino, palaver, lingo, verandah, and coconut from Portuguese;
diva, prima donna, pasta, pizza, paparazzi, and umbrellafrom Italian; adobe,
alcohol, algebra, algorithm, apricot, assassin, caliber, cotton, hazard,
jacket, jar, julep, mosque, Muslim, orange, safari, sofa, and zero from Arabic;
honcho, sushi, andtsunami from Japanese; dim sum, gung ho, kowtow, kumquat,
ketchup, and typhoon from Cantonese; behemoth, hallelujah, Satan, jubilee, and
rabbi from Hebrew; taiga, sable, and sputnik fromRussian; galore, whiskey,
phoney, trousers, and Tory from Irish; brahman, guru, karma, and pandit from
Sanskrit; kampong and amok from Malay; smorgasbord and ombudsman from Swedish,
Danish, Norwegian; sauna from Finnish; and boondocks from the Tagalog word,
bundok. (See also "loanword.")
History:
The search for
meaningful origins for familiar or strange words is far older than the modern
understanding of linguistic evolution and the relationships of languages, which
began no earlier than the 18th century. From Antiquity through the 17th
century, from Pāṇini to Pindar to Sir Thomas Browne, etymology had been a form
of witty wordplay, in which the supposed origins of words were changed to
satisfy contemporary requirements.
The Greek poet
Pindar (born in approximately 522 BCE) employed creative etymologies to flatter
his patrons. Plutarch employed etymologies insecurely based on fancied
resemblances insounds. Isidore of Seville's Etymologiae was an encyclopedic
tracing of "first things" that remained uncritically in use in Europe
until the sixteenth century. Etymologicum genuinum is agrammatical encyclopedia
edited at Constantinople in the ninth century, one of several similar Byzantine
works. The fourteenth-century Legenda Aurea begins each vita of a saint with a
fancifulexcursus in the form of an etymology.[citation needed]
Modern era:
Etymology in the
modern sense emerged in the late 18th century European academia, within the
context of the wider "Age of Enlightenment," although preceded by
17th century pioneers such asMarcus Zuerius van Boxhorn, Vossius, Stephen
Skinner, Elisha Coles, and William Wotton. The first known systematic attempt
to prove the relationship between two languages on the basis of similarity of
grammar and lexicon was made in 1770 by the Hungarian, János Sajnovics, when he
attempted to demonstrate the relationship between Sami and Hungarian (work that
was later extended to the whole Finno-Ugric language family in 1799 by his
fellow countryman, Samuel Gyarmathi).[3] The origin of modern historical
linguistics is often traced back to Sir William Jones, an English philologist
living in India, who in 1782 observed the genetic relationship between
Sanskrit, Greek and Latin. Jones published his The Sanskrit Language in 1786,
laying the foundation for the field of Indo-European linguistics.
In etymology,
back-formation is the process of creating a new lexeme, usually by removing
actual or supposed affixes. The resulting neologism is called a back-formation,
a term coined byJames Murray in 1889. (OED online first definition of 'back
formation' is from the definition of to burgle, which was first published in
1889.)
Back-formation is different
from clipping – back-formation may change the part of speech or the
word's meaning, whereas clipping creates shortened words from longer words, but
does not change the part of speech or the meaning of the word.
For example, the
noun resurrection was borrowed from Latin, and the verb resurrect was then
backformed hundreds of years later from it by removing the ion suffix. This
segmentation ofresurrection into resurrect + ion was possible because English
had examples of Latinate words in the form of verb and verb+-ion pairs, such as
opine/opinion. These became the pattern for many more such pairs, where a verb
derived from a Latin supine stem and a noun ending in ion entered the language
together, such as insert/insertion, project/projection, etc.
Back-formation
may be similar to the reanalyses of folk etymologies when it rests on an
erroneous understanding of the morphology of the longer word. For example, the
singular noun asset is a back-formation from the plural assets. However, assets
is originally not a plural; it is a loan-word from Anglo-Norman asetz (modern
French assez). The -s was reanalyzed as a plural suffix.
Back-formation in the English language:
Many words came
into English by this route: Pease was once a mass noun but was reinterpreted as
a plural, leading to the back-formation pea. The noun statistic was likewise a
back-formation from the field of study statistics. In Britain, the verb burgle
came into use in the 19th century as a back-formation from burglar (which can
be compared to the North American verb burglarizeformed by suffixation).
Other examples are:
·
Adjective
"couth" from "uncouth"
·
Verb
"edit" from "editor"
·
Singular
"syrinx", plural "syringes" (from Greek): new singular
"syringe" formed
·
Singular
"sastruga", plural "sastrugi" (from Russian): new
Latin-type singular "sastrugus" has been used sometimes
·
Verbs
"euthanase" or "euthanize" from the noun
"euthanasia".
Philology is the study of
language in written historical sources; it is a combination of literary studies,
history and linguistics.
Because of its
focus on historical development (diachronic analysis), philology came to be
used as a term contrasting with linguistics. This is due to a 20th-century
development triggered byFerdinand de Saussure's insistence on the importance of
synchronic analysis, and the later emergence of structuralism and Chomskian
linguistics with its emphasis on syntax.
Semantic change, also known as
semantic shift or semantic progression describes the evolution of word usage —
usually to the point that the modern meaning is radically different from the
original usage. In diachronic (or historical) linguistics, semantic change is a
change in one of the meanings of a word. Every word has a variety of senses and
connotations which can be added, removed, or altered over time, often to the
extent that cognates across space and time have very different meanings. The
study of semantic change can be seen as part of etymology,onomasiology,
semasiology, and semantics.
Examples:
·
Awe
- Originally meant "fear, dread"; the adjective awful still retains
the negative sense. The likeliest source for this ameliorative shift was the
word's association with the Christian God, conflictingly portrayed as
authoritative and vengeful on the one hand but as wondrous and benevolent on
the other. Likewise, the expression god-fearing to mean "devout".
·
Demagogue
- Originally meant "a popular leader". It is from the Greek dēmagōgós
"leader of the people", from dēmos "people" + agōgós
"leading, guiding". Now the word has strong connotations of a
politician who panders to emotions and prejudice.
·
Egregious
- Originally described something that was remarkably good. The word is from the
Latin egregius "illustrious, select", literally, "standing out
from the flock", which is from ex- "out of" + greg- (grex)
"flock". Now it means something that is remarkably bad or flagrant.
·
Guy
- Guy Fawkes was the alleged leader of a plot to blow up the English Houses of
Parliament on 5 Nov. 1605. The day was made a holiday, Guy Fawkes day,
commemorated by parading and burning a ragged, grotesque effigy of Fawkes,
known as a Guy. This led to the use of the word guy as a term for any
"person of grotesque appearance" and then by the late 1800s -
especially in America - for "any man", as in, e.g., "Some guy
called for you." Over the 20th century, guy has replaced fellow in
America, and, under the influence of American popular culture, has been
gradually replacing fellow, bloke, chap and other such words throughout the
rest of the English-speaking world. In the plural, it can refer to a mixture of
genders (e.g., "Come on, you guys!" could be directed to a group of
men and women).
·
Gay
- Originally meant (13th c.) "lighthearted", "joyous" or
(14th c.) "bright and showy"; it had also come to acquire
connotations of immorality as early as 1637, either sexual e.g., gay
woman"prostitute", gay man "womanizer", gay house
"brothel", or otherwise, e.g., gay dog "over-indulgent man"
and gay deceiver "deceitful and lecherous". In America by 1897 the
expression gay catreferred to a hobo, especially a younger hobo in the company
of an older one; by 1935, it was used in prison slang for a homosexual boy; and
by 1951 and clipped to gay, referred to homosexuals.
Types of semantic change:
A number of classification schemes have
been suggested for semantic change. The most widely accepted scheme in the
English-speaking academic world is from Bloomfield (1933):
·
Narrowing: Change from superordinate level to
subordinate level. For example, skyline used to refer to any horizon, but now
it has narrowed to a horizon decorated by skyscrapers.
·
Widening: Change from subordinate level to
superordinate level. There are many examples of specific brand names being used
for the general product, such as with Kleenex. Such uses are known as
generonyms.
·
Metaphor: Change based on similarity of thing. For
example, broadcast originally meant "to cast seeds out"; with the
advent of radio and television, the word was extended to indicate the
transmission of audio and video signals. Outside of agricultural circles, very
few people use broadcast in the earlier sense.
·
Metonymy: Change based on nearness in space or
time, e.g., jaw "cheek" → "mandible".
·
Synecdoche: Change based on whole-part relation.
The convention of using capital cities to represent countries or their
governments is an example of this.
·
Meiosis: Change from weaker to stronger
meaning, e.g., kill "torment" → "slaughter"
·
Hyperbole: . Change from stronger to weaker
meaning, e.g., astound "strike with thunder" → "surprise
strongly".
·
Degeneration: e.g., knave "boy" →
"servant" → "deceitful or despicable man".
·
Elevation: e.g., knight "boy" →
"nobleman".
However, the categorization of Blank
(1998) has gained increasing acceptance:
·
Metaphor: Change based on similarity between
concepts, e.g., mouse "rodent" → "computer device".
·
Metonymy: Change based on contiguity between
concepts, e.g., horn "animal horn" → "musical instrument".
·
Synecdoche: Same as above.
·
Specialization of meaning: Downward shift
in a taxonomy, e.g., corn "grain" → "wheat" (UK), →
"maize" (US).
·
Generalization of meaning: Upward shift
in a taxonomy, e.g., hoover "Hoover vacuum cleaner" → "any type
of vacuum cleaner".
·
Cohyponymic transfer: Horizontal
shift in a taxonomy, e.g., the confusion of mouse and rat in some dialects.
·
Antiphrasis: Change based on a contrastive aspect
of the concepts, e.g., perfect lady in the sense of "prostitute".
·
Auto-antonymy: Change of a word's sense and concept
to the complementary opposite, e.g., bad in the slang sense of
"good".
·
Auto-converse: Lexical expression of a
relationship by the two extremes of the respective relationship, e.g., take in
the dialectal use as "give".
·
Ellipsis: Semantic change based on the
contiguity of names, e.g., car "cart" → "automobile", due
to the invention of the (motor) car.
·
Folk-etymology: Semantic change based on the
similarity of names, e.g., French contredanse, orig. English country dance.
Blank considers
it problematic, though, to include amelioration and pejoration of meaning as
well as strengthening and weakening of meaning. According to Blank, these are
not objectively classifiable phenomena; moreover, Blank has shown that all of
the examples listed under these headings can be grouped into the other
phenomena.
Methods Of Etymology:
Etymology
is the study of the history of words — when they entered a language, from what source,
and how their form and meaning have changed over time.
Etymological
theory recognizes that words originate through a limited number of basic
mechanisms, the most important of which are the following:
·
Borrowing, i.e. the adoption of loanwords from other
languages.
·
Word formation such as derivation and compounding.
·
Onomatopoeia and sound symbolism, i.e. the
creation of imitative words.
While
the origin of newly emerged words is often more or less transparent, it tends
to become obscured through time due to:
·
Sound
change: for example, it
is not obvious at first sight that English set is related to sit (the former is
originally a causative formation of the latter), and even less so that bless is
related to blood (the former was originally a derivative with the meaning “to
mark with blood”, or the like).
·
Semantic
change: English bead
originally meant “prayer”, and acquired its modern sense through the practice
of counting prayers with beads.
Most
often combinations of etymological mechanisms apply. For example, the German
word bitte (please) the German word beten (to pray) and the Dutch
word bidden (to pray) are related through sound and meaning to the
English word bead.
The
combination of sound change and semantic change often creates etymological
connections that are impossible to detect by merely looking at the modern
word-forms. For instance, English lord comes from Old English
hlāf-weard, meaning literally “bread guard”. The components of this
compound, in turn, yielded modern English loaf and ward.
Synchronic analysis:
In linguistics,
a synchronic analysis is one that views linguistic phenomena only at one point
in time, usually the present, though a synchronic analysis of a historical
language form is also possible.
This may be
distinguished from diachronics, which regards a phenomenon in terms of
developments through time. Diachronic analysis is the main concern of
historical linguistics; most other branches of linguistics are concerned with
some form of synchronic analysis.
Synchronic and
diachronic
approaches can reach quite different conclusions. For example, a Germanic
strong verb like English sing - sang - sung is irregular when viewed
synchronically: the native speaker's brain processes these as learned forms,
whereas the derived forms of regular verbs are processed quite differently, by
the application of productive rules (for example, adding -edto the basic form
of a verb as in walk - walked). This is an insight of psycholinguistics,
relevant also for language didactics, both of which are synchronic disciplines.
However a diachronic analysis will show that the strong verb is the remnant of
a fully regular system of internal vowel changes; historical linguistics seldom
uses the category "irregular verb".
What's the Difference Between a
Definition and an Etymology?
A definition
tells us what a word means and how it's used in our own time. An etymology
tells us where a word came from (often, but not always, from another language)
and what it used to mean.
For example,
according to The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, the
definition of the word disaster is "an occurrence causing widespread
destruction and distress; a catastrophe" or "a grave misfortune."
But the etymology of the word disaster takes us back to a time when people
commonly blamed great misfortunes on the influence of the stars.
Disaster first
appeared in English in the late 16th century, just in time for Shakespeare to
use the word in the play King Lear. It arrived by way of the Old Italian word
disastro, which meant "unfavorable to one's stars."
This older,
astrological sense of disaster becomes easier to understand when we study its
Latin root word, astrum, which also appears in our modern "star" word
astronomy. With the negative Latin prefix dis- ("apart") added to
astrum ("star"), the word (in Latin, Old Italian, and Middle French)
conveyed the idea that a catastrophe could be traced to the "evil
influence of a star or planet" (a definition that the dictionary tells us
is now "obsolete").
Is the Etymology of a Word Its True
Definition?
Not at all, though people sometimes try
to make this argument. The word etymology is derived from the Greek word
etymon, which means "the true sense of a word." But in fact the
original meaning of a word is often different from its contemporary definition.
The meanings of many words have changed
over time, and older senses of a word may grow uncommon or disappear entirely
from everyday use. Disaster, for instance, no longer means the "evil
influence of a star or planet," just as consider no longer means "to
observe the stars."
Let's look at another example. Our
English word salary is defined by The American Heritage Dictionary of the
English Language as "fixed compensation for services, paid to a person on
a regular basis." Its etymology can be traced back 2,000 years to sal, the
Latin word for salt. So what's the connection between salt and salary?
The Roman historian Pliny the Elder
tells us that "in Rome, a soldier was paid in salt," which back then
was widely used as a food preservative. Eventually, this salarium came to
signify a stipend paid in any form, usually money. Even today the expression
"worth your salt" indicates that you're working hard and earning your
salary. However, this doesn't mean that salt is the true definition of salary.
Where Do Words Come From?
New words have entered (and continue to
enter) the English language in many different ways. Here are some of the most
common ways.
·
Borrowing
The majority of the words used in modern
English have been borrowed from other languages. Although most of our
vocabulary comes from Latin and Greek (often by way of other European
languages), English has borrowed words from more than 300 different languages
around the world. Here are just a few examples:
• futon
(from the Japanese word for "bedclothes, bedding")
• gorilla
(Greek Gorillai, a tribe of hairy women, perhaps of African origin)
• hamster
(Middle High German hamastra)
• kangaroo
(Aboriginal language of Guugu Yimidhirr, gangurru , referring to a species of
kangaroo)
• kink
(Dutch, "twist in a rope")
• moccasin
(Native American Indian, Virginia Algonquian, akin to Powhatan mäkäsn and
Ojibwa makisin)
• molasses
(Portuguese melaços, from Late Latin mellceum, from Latin mel,
"honey")
• muscle
(Latin musculus, "mouse")
• slogan
(alteration of Scots slogorne, "battle cry")
• smorgasbord
(Swedish, literally "bread and butter table")
• whiskey
(Old Irish uisce, "water," and bethad, "of life")
·
Clipping or Shortening
Some new words
are simply shortened forms of existing words, for instance indie from
independent; exam from examination; flu from influenza, and fax from facsimile.
·
Compounding
A new word may
also be created by combining two or more existing words: fire engine, for
example, and babysitter.
·
Blends
A blend (also
called a portmanteau word) is a word formed by merging the sounds and meanings
of two or more other words. Examples include moped, from mo(tor) + ped(al), and
brunch, from br(eakfast) + (l)unch.
·
Conversion or Functional Shift
New words are often formed by changing
an existing word from one part of speech to another. For example, innovations
in technology have encouraged the transformation of the nouns network, Google,
microwave, and fax into verbs.
·
Transfer of Proper Nouns
Sometimes the
names of people, places, and things become generalized vocabulary words. For
instance, the noun maverick was derived from the name of an American cattleman,
Samuel Augustus Maverick. The saxophone was named after Sax, the surname of a
19th-century Belgian family that made musical instruments.
·
Neologisms or Creative Coinages
A neologism ( /niːˈɒlədʒɪzəm/;
from Greek νέο- (néo-), meaning "new", and λόγος (lógos), meaning
"speech, utterance") is a newly coined term, word, or phrase, that
may be in the process of entering common use, but has not yet been accepted
into mainstream language. Neologisms are often directly attributable to a
specific person, publication, period, or event. Neolexia (Greek: a "new
word", or the act of creating a new word) is a fully equivalent term.
Neologisms are
often created by combining existing words (see compound noun and adjective) or
by giving words new and unique suffixes or prefixes. Portmanteaux are combined
words that are sometimes used commonly. "Brunch" is an example of a
portmanteau word (breakfast + lunch). Lewis Carroll's "snark" (snake
+ shark) is also a portmanteau. Neologisms also can be created through
abbreviation or acronym, by intentionally rhyming with existing words or simply
through playing with sounds.
When a word or
phrase is no longer "new", it is no longer a neologism. Neologisms
may take decades to become "old", however. Opinions differ on exactly
how old a word must be to cease being considered a neologism.
Now and then,
new products or processes inspire the creation of entirely new words. Such
neologisms are usually short lived, never even making it into a dictionary.
Nevertheless, some have endured, for example quark (coined by novelist James
Joyce), galumph (Lewis Carroll), aspirin (originally a trademark), grok (Robert
A. Heinlein).
·
Imitation of Sounds
Words are also
created by onomatopoeia, naming things by imitating the sounds that are
associated with them: boo, bow-wow, tinkle, click.
Why Should We Care About Word Histories?
If a word's
etymology is not the same as its definition, why should we care at all about
word histories? Well, for one thing, understanding how words have developed can
teach us a great deal about our cultural history. In addition, studying the
histories of familiar words can help us to deduce the meanings of unfamiliar
words, thereby enriching our vocabularies. Finally, word stories are often both
entertaining and thought provoking. As any youngster can tell you, words are
fun.
Phonetics:
- The branch
of linguistics that studies word components of the phonetic system of the
language.
- Concerned
with human noises by which the thought is actualized or given audible
shape + nature, fs, relation to the meaning of these noises
·
Phonetics
is the study of speech sounds. Although language is obviously composed of
sound, speech sounds came to be the main focus of linguistic investigation only
in the 20th century. 19th century linguists were more interested in written
rather than spoken language. Only with the work of Swiss linguist Ferdinand de
Saussure in the early 20th century did linguists recognize the primacy of sound
in human language and the secondary, superficial nature of writing.
Phonetics has
three branches:
·
Acoustic phonetics: is the study of the physical
properties of sounds, the air wave frequencies of which sounds consist. The
frequency of vibrations measured in hertz; volume of sound measured in
decibels. Instruments used to measure and record speech sounds include the
sound spectrograph, which produces readouts called sound spectrograms.
·
Auditory phonetics: is the study of
how sounds are perceived by the human ear or recognized by the brain. (Mention
Oronyms, Mondegreens.)
·
Articulatory phonetics: is the study
of how sounds are produced by the vocal apparatus/how speech sounds are made or
articulated.
Components
of phonetic system:
- segmental
phonemes
- word stress
- syllabic
structure
- intonation
Phoneme: Smallest distinctive speech sounds in
a language. Each phoneme in a language is unique and different from other
phoneme. It is the smallest unit of sound employed to form meaningful contrasts
between utterances. If phoneme changes, meaning also changes. Each spoken word
has one or more individual phoneme.
Pan – Span (Same phoneme)
Pan – tan (Different phoneme)
The phoneme
- Basic
concept of phonetics
- Smallest
unit of language, existing as such speech sound which is capable of
differentiating one word from another, or one grammatical form from another.
- Speech
sound that makes a difference in meaning
- A class or
family of sounds regarded as a single sound and represented in
transcription by the same symbol
- Abstractional
and generalized in character exists in our minds as an abstraction and at
the same time is generalized in speech in the form of its allophones
Phoneme
may be
pronounced differently in different ws but still remain the same phoneme pleat-play-wale.
2 main classes of phonemes: vowels and consonants
Pairs of words that demonstrate a
phonemic contrast – minimal pairs
(discovered by method of commutation)
Phonemics: Study of the sound system / phoneme of
a given language. It is also the classification and analysis of its phoneme.
Morpheme: Smallest meaningful unit into which a
word can be divided. Free Morpheme
can be used alone as individual words.
Eg: Take, Slighly.
Bound morpheme form words only when attached to
one morpheme. Bound morpheme are prefixes and suffixes.
UN-SLIGHT-LY (Bound – free
–bound morpheme)
Affixes:
Prefixes and suffixes.
Inflectional
affix
– Shows a grammatical feature.
Example: Crown – Crowns
Go
– Going
Derivational
affixes
are either prefixes or suffixes, which changes the meaning of the word to which
they are attached.
Eg: Plant
– Transplant
Believable
– unbelievable
Joy
– Joyless
Syntax is the
arrangement of words into phrases and sentences. It is words arranged into
phrases and phrase arranged into sentences. Words put in order.
Eg. I had stolen the car / I had the car
stolen / Stolen the car I.
Grapheme – Smallest
meaningful unit of a written language.
Morphology Is the arrangement and relationship of the smallest meaningful units
in a language these minimum units of meaning are called morphemes. It is often
useful to distinguish between free and bound morphemes
Free morphemes can be used alone as independent words for example, take, for,
each etc
Bound morphemes form words only when attached to at least one other morphemes; re,
dis ,un, -ing, –ful and –tion
are all bound morphemes.
The most familiar bound
morphemes are affixes (that is, prefixes and suffixes) but even bases
(Forms to which affixes are attached) can be bound. An example of a bound base
is the –cept of words as except, accept, deceptive, and reception;
although -cept derives from an independent Latin verb capere ‘to
take’, it appears only as a bound morpheme in English.
Syntax is the arrangement of words in to phrases, clauses, and sentences,
loosely speaking, it is word order. A simple example like the difference
between I had stolen my car and I had my car stolen illustrates how crucial syntax is in English.
English speakers have more option with
respect to syntax than they do with respect to phonology or morphology. But we
have the option of saying either I like
dogs. Or dogs I like. This freedom is limited, however; they cannot say like dogs I. Or Like I dogs.
The Lexicon of a language is the list of all the Morphemes in the language. In
linguistic terminology, a lexicon differs from vocabulary or a dictionary of a
language in that it includes not only independent words but also morphemes that
do not appear as independent words, including affixes such as-ed, -s, mis, and
poly- and bound forms like the –clude of include, exclude, and preclude, which
appear only as part of words and never as independent words. One of the most
remarkable features of English today is the great size and diversity of origin
of its Lexicon.
Semantics is the study of meanings or all the meanings
expressed by a language. It is the relationship between language and the real
world, between the sounds we make and what we are talking about like all other
aspects of language, meanings change overtime
There are a number of possible ways of classifying
types of semantic change. None of them are totally satisfactory:
1. Generalization and Narrowing.
2. Amelioration and Pejoration.
3. Strengthening and Weakening.
4. Abstraction and Concretization.
5. Shift in Denotation.
Affix: An affix is a
morpheme which is added to a root morpheme in the formation of a word. In its
broadest sense, an affix can be a prefix, a suffix, or an infix. More narrowly,
infixes are sometimes treated separately. See also morphology.
ATN
=
Augmented Transition Network.
Diphthong: If the tongue
moves significantly during the production of a vowel phone, the result is a
diphthong. A diphthong sounds like a rapid, blended sequence of two separate
vowels. An example in English is the vowel sound in the word kite, which is
like a rapid combination of a kind of 'a sound' and a kind of 'i sound'. In the
IPA a diphthong is represented by two vowel symbols. It is important to note
that the two symbols represent a SINGLE phone.
Ellipsis: A technical term for leaving out words in
sentences. For example, in Brian ate the ice-cream and Judy the peaches, there
is ellipsis, since the word ate is omitted after Judy.
Grapheme: A grapheme is a 'spelling unit'. For example,
in Spanish the combination ll represents a different sound from a single l.
Thus these are two graphemes. In English, graphemes may be quite complex. For
example -tion behaves more-or-less as a single grapheme in words like function.
Inflection: A grammatical change in the form of a word
(more accurately of a lexeme), which leaves the 'base meaning' and the
grammatical category of the word unchanged. In English, inflections are
restricted to the endings of words (i.e. suffixes). Other languages may show
changes elsewhere. As an example, the suffix s is the usual written plural
inflection in English. Inflections in nouns may show changes of number, gender,
case, etc.; in verbs, of number, person, tense, aspect, etc. See also
morphology.
Intonation: Intonation refers to changes in the tone or
frequency of sounds during speech. For example, in English the tone usually
falls at the end of a statement and rises at the end of a question, so that You
want some coffee. and You want some coffee? can be distinguished by tone alone.
In some languages (e.g. Chinese, Thai), sequences containing the same phones
but with different intonation patterns correspond to different words.
IPA: The International Phonetic Alphabet or IPA is
a set of symbols which can be used to represent the phones and phonemes of
natural languages. A subset which can be used to represent 'Standard English
English' (roughly the dialect of middle-class people from the south east of
England) is given in a separate table.
Morphology: The structure of words and the study of this
structure. For example, a morphological analysis of the English word
unknowingly might yield four components, called morphemes. These are the root
know and three affixes, the prefix un indicating negation, and two suffixes ing
and ly. Note that both spelling and pronunciation changes can take place when
morphemes are combined. Thus the root happy plus the affix ly yields happily
not *happyly. Many English words appear to contain morphemes, but resist neat
division. For example, the suffix ish often indicates that the word refers to a
language (e.g. English, Spanish, Danish, Swedish), but removing the suffix does
not always leave a clear root morpheme (e.g. Spanish = ?Span(e) + ish). In
other cases, it may be that a word was in the past created from distinct
morphemes, but that this is not obvious to a contemporary speaker as the
morphemes are no longer used in forming new words.
When
an affix morpheme is an inflection, the word can be said to show inflectional
morphology. Thus the word chased (= chase + ed) shows inflectional morphology.
In many languages, including English, inflectional morphology is relatively
predictable, and can be handled by rules.
In
other cases, the word can be said to show derivational morphology. Thus the
word output = out + put shows derivational morphology: adding the prefix out to
the verb put creates a noun with the approximate meaning "that which was
put out". In many languages, including English, derivational morphology is
unpredictable, and so cannot easily be handled by rules. Thus there's no noun
*outgo meaning "that which went out" (although there is a noun, most
often used in the plural, outgoings = out + go + ing + s).
NL = Natural
Language.
NLP = Natural
Language Processing.
Phone: A phone is a 'unit sound' of a language in
the sense that it is the minimal sound by which two words can differ. For
example, the English word feed contains three phones since each can be
independently substituted to form a different word. In the IPA, the three
phones can be written as [f], [i] and [d]. Examples of substitutions are: [fid]
- [f] + [s] gives [sid], i.e. seed; [fid] - [i] + [u] gives [fud], i.e. food;
[fid] - [d] + [t] gives [fit], i.e. feet. The whole of each phone must be
substituted to change one word into another. It is important to note that
whether or not speakers can distinguish between sounds is not a test of whether
they constitute distinct phones. The word tea could be represented as [ti] and
the word tree as [tri]. However, the two 't sounds' are not quite the same: the
tongue is further back in the mouth when pronouncing the [t] in [tri] than when
pronouncing the [t] in [ti]. How far to divide up sounds into phones is
essentially a pragmatic question. Using more phones will enable speech to
represented more accurately but at a cost in terms of complexity. See also
allophone, phoneme.
Phoneme: A phoneme is a minimally distinctive set of
sounds in a language; sound sequences which differ in a single phoneme can
constitute different words. Thus the pairs tip-dip and trip-drip show that
English has two distinct phonemes, which we can write as /t/ and /d/, since
substituting one for the other produces a different word. However, the
pronunciation of /t/ (and /d/) is not the same in each pair: the tongue is
further back in the mouth when /t/ is followed by /r/. Hence there are at least
two phones corresponding to the /t/ phoneme. However there are no two English
words in which the ONLY difference is that the 't sound in trip' is replaced by
the 't sound in tip' -- these two sounds are allophones of the same phoneme.
English speakers do not need to recognize the difference between them.
Phonetics: Phonetics is
the study of the sounds of speech (i.e. the study of phones). It can be
distinguished from phonology which is more concerned with the underlying theory
(i.e. the phonemes which underlie phones and the rules which govern the
conversion of phonemes to phones and vice versa).
Phonological
rule: At some theoretical level, words can be considered
to be composed of phonemes. The actual sound of a word then depends on which
allophone is chosen for each phoneme. The context-sensitive rules which
determine this are called phonological rules. Thus the word input can be
considered to contain the phoneme /n/. However in fast speech in many dialects
of English, the phone used will be [m]. The relevant phonological rule for
English is that a nasal becomes articulated at the same position as a following
stop.
Pragmatics: A technical term meaning, roughly, what the
person speaking or writing actually meant, rather than what the words
themselves mean.
Prefix: A prefix is a morpheme which is added before
a root morpheme in the formation of a word. See morphology.
Referential
semantics: A system where the meaning of a word just is
the thing it refers to.
Semantic
feature: A semantic feature is a 'primitive' which a
language processor (human or computer) is assumed to be able to determine
independently of the language system. The meaning of words such as nouns or
adjectives can then be described in terms of sets of these features. For
example we might describe the meaning of words such as boy, man, girl and woman
in terms of the features YOUNG, MALE and HUMAN. Boy would be [+YOUNG, +MALE,
+HUMAN], woman would be [-YOUNG, -MALE, +HUMAN]
Stress
Words
can be divided into syllables, usually centred around a vowel. In many
languages, including English, the duration and relative loudness of a syllable
-- its stress -- are important. Thus only stress distinguishes the noun PROcess
(as in the sentence This process is called assimilation) from the much less
common verb proCESS (as in the sentence I usually process at the degree
ceremony). The noun is stressed on the first syllable, the verb on the second.
Suffix: A suffix is a morpheme which is added after a
root morpheme in the formation of a word. See morphology.
Syntax: The syntax of a language comprises, roughly
speaking, the patterns into which its words can be validly arranged to form
sentences. The combination of morphology and syntax is sometimes called the
grammar of a language.
Nonverbal communication is usually understood
as the process of communication through sending and receiving wordless (mostly
visual) messages between people. Messages can be communicated through gestures
and touch, by body language or posture, by facial expression and eye contact.
Nonverbal messages could also be communicated through material exponential;
meaning, objects or artifacts (such as clothing, hairstyles or architecture).
Speech contains nonverbal elements known as paralanguage, including voice
quality, rate, pitch, volume, and speaking style, as well prosodic features
such as rhythm, intonation, and stress. Likewise, written texts have nonverbal
elements such as handwriting style, spatial arrangement of words, or the
physical layout of a page. However, much of the study of nonverbal
communication has focused on face-to-face interaction, where it can be
classified into three principal areas: environmental conditions where
communication takes place, physical characteristics of the communicators, and
behaviors of communicators during interaction.
Proxemics: Physical Space in CommunicationWhen you are talking to someone stay out of their “intimate space” they want to talk to you but just do not want to have you all over them. “ Most animals have a certain air space around their bodies that they claim as their personal space…1-18 in being the intimate zone, 18-48 in being the personal zone, 4-12 ft. being the social zone and the public zone at over 12 ft.”
Proxemics is the study of how people use and perceive the physical space around them. The space between the sender and the receiver of a message influences the way the message is interpreted. In addition, the perception and use of space varies significantly across cultures[10] and different settings within cultures. Space in nonverbal communication may be divided into four main categories: intimate, social, personal, and public space.
Chronemics: time in communication
Chronemics is the study of the use of time in
nonverbal communication. The way we perceive time, structure our time and react
to time is a powerful communication tool and helps set the stage for
communication. Time perceptions include punctuality and the willingness to
wait, plus the speed of speech and how long people are willing to listen. The
timing and frequency of an action as well as the tempo and rhythm of
communications within an interaction contributes to the interpretation of
nonverbal messages. Gudykunst & Ting-Toomey (1988) identified two dominant
time patterns: monochronic time and polychronic time.
Monochronic TimeA monochronic time system means that things are done one at a time and time is segmented into precise, small units. Under this system time is scheduled, arranged and managed.
The United States is considered a monochronic
society. This perception of time is learned and rooted in the Industrial
Revolution, where "factory life required the labor force to be on hand and
in place at an appointed hour" (Guerrero, DeVito & Hecht, 1999, p.
238). For Americans, time is a precious resource not to be wasted or taken
lightly. "We buy time, save time, spend time and make time. Our time can
be broken down into years, months, days, hours, minutes, seconds and even
milliseconds. We use time to structure both our daily lives and events that we
are planning for the future. We have schedules that we must follow:
appointments that we must go to at a certain time, classes that start and end
at certain times, work schedules that start and end at certain times, and even
our favorite TV shows, that start and end at a certain time.”
As communication scholar Edward T. Hall wrote
regarding the American viewpoint of time in the business world, “the schedule
is sacred.” Hall says that for monochronic cultures, “time is tangible” and
viewed as a commodity where “time is money” or “time is wasted.” The result of
this perspective is that Americans and other monochronic cultures, such as the
German and Swiss, place a paramount value on schedules, tasks and “getting the
job done.” These cultures are committed to regimented schedules and may view
those who do not subscribe to the same perception of time as disrespectful.
Monochronic cultures include Germany, Canada, Switzerland, the United
States, and Scandinavia.Polychronic Time
A polychronic time system is a system where
several things can be done at once, and a more fluid approach is taken to
scheduling time. Unlike Americans and most northern and western European
cultures, Native American, Latin American, Arab and African cultures use the
polychronic system of time.
These cultures are much less focused on the
preciseness of accounting for each and every moment. As Raymond Cohen notes,
polychronic cultures are deeply steeped in tradition rather than in tasks—a
clear difference from their monochronic counterparts. Cohen notes that
"Traditional societies have all the time in the world. The arbitrary
divisions of the clock face have little saliency in cultures grounded in the cycle
of the seasons, the invariant pattern of rural life, and the calendar of
religious festivities" (Cohen, 1997, p. 34).
Instead, their culture is more focused on
relationships, rather than watching the clock. They have no problem being
“late” for an event if they are with family or friends, because the
relationship is what really matters. As a result, polychronic cultures have a
much less formal perception of time. They are not ruled by precise calendars
and schedules. Rather, “cultures that use the polychronic time system often
schedule multiple appointments simultaneously so keeping on schedule is an
impossibility.”
Polychronic cultures include Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Mexico, the Philippines,
India, and many in Africa.Movement and body position
Kinesics
The term "kinesics" was first used (in
1952) by Ray Birdwhistell, an anthropologist who wished to study how people
communicate through posture, gesture, stance, and movement. Part of
Birdwhistell's work involved making films of people in social situations and
analyzing them to show different levels of communication not clearly seen
otherwise. Several other anthropologists, including Margaret Mead and Gregory
Bateson, also studied kinesics.
Haptics: touching in communication
A high five is an example of communicative touch.
Haptics is the study of touching as nonverbal communication, and haptic
communication refers to how people and other animals communicate via touching.
Touches among humans that can be defined as
communication include handshakes, holding hands, kissing (cheek, lips, hand),
back slapping, high fives, a pat on the shoulder, and brushing an arm. Touching
of oneself may include licking, picking, holding, and scratching. These
behaviors are referred to as "adapters" or "tells" and may
send messages that reveal the intentions or feelings of a communicator. The
meaning conveyed from touch is highly dependent upon the culture, the context
of the situation, the relationship between communicators, and the manner of
touch.
Touch is an extremely important sense for humans;
as well as providing information about surfaces and textures it is a component
of nonverbal communication in interpersonal relationships, and vital in
conveying physical intimacy. It can be both sexual (such as kissing) and
platonic (such as hugging or tickling).
Touch is the earliest sense to develop in the
fetus. The development of an infant's haptic senses and how it relates to the
development of the other senses such as vision have been the target of much
research. Human babies have been observed to have enormous difficulty surviving
if they do not possess a sense of touch, even if they retain sight and hearing.
Babies who can perceive through touch, even without sight and hearing, tend to
fare much better. Touch can be thought of as a basic sense in that most life
forms have a response to being touched, while only a subset have sight and
hearing.
In chimpanzees the sense of touch is highly
developed. As newborns they see and hear poorly but cling strongly to their
mothers. Harry Harlow conducted a controversial study involving rhesus monkeys
and observed that monkeys reared with a "terry cloth mother," a wire
feeding apparatus wrapped in soft terry cloth that provided a level of tactile
stimulation and comfort, were considerably more emotionally stable as adults
than those with a mere wire mother.(Harlow,1958)
Touching is treated differently from one country
to another and socially acceptable levels of touching vary from one culture to
another (Remland, 2009). In Thai culture, for example, touching someone's head
may be thought rude. Remland and Jones (1995) studied groups of people
communicating and found that touching was rare among the English (8%), the
French (5%) and the Dutch (4%) compared to Italians (14%) and Greeks (12.5%).
Striking, pushing, pulling, pinching, kicking,
strangling and hand-to-hand fighting are forms of touch in the context of
physical abuse. In a sentence like "I never touched him/her" or
"Don't you dare touch him/her," the term touch may be meant as a
euphemism for either physical abuse or sexual touching.
Stoeltje (2003) wrote about how Americans are
"losing touch" with this important communication skill. During a
study conducted by University of Miami School of Medicine, Touch Research
Institutes, American children were said to be more aggressive than their French
counterparts while playing at a playground. It was noted that French women
touched their children more.
Functions of nonverbal communication
Argyle (1970) put forward the hypothesis that
whereas spoken language is normally used for communicating information about
events external to the speakers, non-verbal codes are used to establish and
maintain interpersonal relationships. It is considered more polite or nicer to
communicate attitudes towards others non-verbally rather than verbally, for
instance in order to avoid embarrassing situations.
Argyle (1988) concluded there are five primary functions of nonverbal bodily
behavior in human communication:
·
Express emotions
·
Express interpersonal attitudes
·
To accompany speech in managing the cues of
interaction between speakers and listeners
·
Self-presentation of one’s personality
·
Rituals (greetings)
In regards to expressing interpersonal attitudes, humans communicate interpersonal closeness through a series of nonverbal actions known as immediacy behaviors. Examples of immediacy behaviors are smiling, touching, open body positions, and eye contact. Cultures that display these immediacy behaviors are considered high-contact cultures.
Interaction of verbal and nonverbal communication
When communicating, nonverbal messages can
interact with verbal messages in six ways: repeating, conflicting,
complementing, substituting, regulating and accenting/moderating. Conflicting
Verbal and nonverbal messages within the same interaction can sometimes send
opposing or conflicting messages. A person verbally expressing a statement of
truth while simultaneously fidgeting or avoiding eye contact may convey a mixed
message to the receiver in the interaction. Conflicting messages may occur for
a variety of reasons often stemming from feelings of uncertainty, ambivalence,
or frustration. When mixed messages occur, nonverbal communication becomes the
primary tool people use to attain additional information to clarify the
situation; great attention is placed on bodily movements and positioning when
people perceive mixed messages during interactions
Complementing
Accurate interpretation of messages is made
easier when nonverbal and verbal communications complement each other.
Nonverbal cues can be used to elaborate on verbal messages to reinforce the
information sent when trying to achieve communicative goals; messages have been
shown to be remembered better when nonverbal signals affirm the verbal exchange.
Substituting
Nonverbal behavior is sometimes used as the sole
channel for communication of a message. People learn to identify facial
expressions, body movements, and body positioning as corresponding with
specific feelings and intentions. Nonverbal signals can be used without verbal
communication to convey messages; when nonverbal behavior does not effectively
communicate a message; verbal methods are used to enhance understanding.
Nonverbal
communication is the process of sending and receiving messages from another
person. These messages can be conveyed through gestures, engagement, posture,
and even clothing and hygiene. Nonverbal communication can convey a very
different message than a verbal conversation. This can tell someone whether
they are liked, interesting or hated. Nonverbal communication can have meanings
in objects as well. Certain articles in a person’s life can say a lot about
them and can sometimes even talk for them. A person’s handwriting can also tell
a lot about the way they can communicate with others. Nonverbal communication
can be easiest practiced when the two communicators are face to face. The
nonverbal aspect of communication is easiest when the environment is right for
all communicators involved, such as, when the environment is right or the
moment is right. Nonverbal communication is an important aspect in any
conversation skill people are practicing. Nonverbal communication will inhibit
someone to be able to tell other person how they are really feeling without
having to voice any opinions. People can interpret body signals better than
they can talk most of the time.
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