978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS AN INTRODUCTION © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
Cambridge University Press
978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
© in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
Cambridge University Press
978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS AN INTRODUCTION JOHN LYONS Master, Trinity Hall, Cambridge ; . \"~,,, . CAMBRIDGE ::: UNIVERSITY PRESS © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
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Languageandlinguistics1.Linguistics.I.Title410P12180--42002
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978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
Contents Preface ix I Language I. I What is language? 1.2 Some definitions of 'language' 1.3 Language-behaviour and language-systems 1.4 Language and speech 1.5 The semiotic point of view 1.6 The fiction of homogeneity 1.7 There are no primitive languages Further reading Questions and exercises Linguistics 2. I Branches of linguistics 2.2 Is linguistics a science? 2.3 Terminology and notation 2-4 Linguistics is descriptive, not prescriptive 2.5 Priority of synchronic description 2.6 Structure and system Further reading Questions and exercises 3 8 II 17 24 27 31 31 34 37 2 46 47 59 66 3 The sounds of language 3. I The phonic medium 3.2 Phonetic and orthographic representation 3.3 Articulatory phonetics 3 -4 Phonemes and allophones 3.5 Distinctive features and suprasegmental phonology 3.6 Phonological structure Further reading Questions and exercises 69 72 84 95 98 98 © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
VI Contents 100 104 109 II3 II7 124 129 131 4 Grammar 4.1 Syntax, inflection and morphology 4.2 Grammaticality, productivity and arbitrariness 4·3 Parts of speech, form-classes and grammatical categories 4-4 Some additional grammatical concepts -structure 4·5 Constituent 4.6 Generative grammar Further reading Questions and exercises 5 Semantics 5.1 The diversity of meaning 5.2 Lexical meaning: homonymy, polysemy, synonymy 5·3 Lexical meaning: sense and denotation 5·4 Semantics and grammar 5·5 Sentence-meaning and utterance-meaning 5.6 Formal semantics Further reading Questions and exercises 6 Language-change 6.1 Historical linguistics 6.2 Language-families 6.3 The comparative method 6-4 Analogy and borrowing 6.5 The causes of language-change Further reading Questions and exercises 7 Some modern schools and movements 7.1 Historicism 7.2 Structuralism 7·3 Functionalism 7-4 Generativism Further reading Questions and exercises 136 144 151 156 163 170 175 176 179 184 192 201 207 213 213 216 218 224 228 235 236 © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
Contents 8 Language and mind 8. I Universal grammar and its relevance 8.2 Mentalism, rationalism and innateness 8.3 Language and the brain 8-4 Language-acquisition 8.5 Other areas of pyscholinguistics 8.6 Cognitive science and artificial intelligence Further reading Questions and exercises 9 Language and society 9. I Sociolinguistics, ethnolinguistics and psycho linguistics 9.2 Accent, dialect and idiolect 9.3 Standards and vernaculars 9-4 Bilingualism, code-switching and diglossia 9.5 Practical applications 9.6 Stylistic variation and stylistics Further reading Questions and exercises IO vii 238 242 248 251 257 262 2 2 266 268 276 281 286 290 297 298 Language and culture IO.I What is culture? 10.2 The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis 10.3 Colour-terms IO-4 Pronouns of address IO.5 Cultural overlap, cultural diffusion and translatability Further reading Questions and exercises Bibliography Index 301 303 312 317 322 329 330 333 351 © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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© in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
Preface This book is designed for the course, entitled 'Language and Linguistics', which my colleagues and I teach to first-year students at the University of Sussex. Very few of these students come to the University with the intention of taking a degree in Linguistics. Some of them, having had their interest aroused by the course, do in fact transfer into Linguistics from other subjects. The vast majority, however, go on to complete their degree-work, as we expect that they will, in the discipline which they originally chose as their major subject in applying for admission. Our aim, therefore, in teaching 'Language and Linguistics' is to introduce our students to some of the more important theoretical concepts and empirical findings of modern linguistics, but to do so at a relatively non-technical level and in a way that emphasizes the connections between linguistics and the many other academic disciplines that are concerned, for their own purposes and from their own point of view, with the study of language. I trust that this book will prove to be equally suitable for similar courses on language, which now exist at many universities, polytechnics and colleges of education, both in this country and abroad. I hope that it will be of some interest also to the general reader who wishes to learn something of modern linguistics. This book is broader in coverage, and less demanding in its central chapters, than my Introduction to Theoretical Linguistics (1968). It is correspondingly less detailed in its treatment of many topics. But I have appended to each chapter a list of suggestions for further reading. This should be comprehensive enough for lecturers and instructors using the book to make a selection according to their knowledge of the field and their theoretical preferences; and they can add to my list of books a number of important journal articles which, unless they have been reprinted © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
x Preface in accessible publications, I have as a matter of policy excluded. The Bibliography is geared to the annotated Suggestions for Further Reading and is representative of most, if not all, points of view. For the benefit of students using the book without specialized guidance, and to help the interested general reader who wishes to go further into the subject, I have picked out about twenty general textbooks and collections of articles and asterisked these in the Bibliography. Here too I have been careful to make a representative selection -representative both of different theore-tical viewpoints and of different levels of exposition. Each chapter has associated with it a set of Questions and Exercises. Some of these are straightforward revision questions that can be answered without further reading. Some -especially those containing quotations from other works on linguistics -will oblige the student to consider and evaluate opinions different from those which I put forward myself in this book. A few of the questions are quite difficult; I would not expect students to be able to answer them, without assistance, on the basis of a ten-week course in Linguistics. On the other hand, I think it is important that students taking such courses should be given some sense of what Linguistics is like at a more advanced, though not necessarily more technical, level; and it is surprising what can be achieved by means of a little Socratic midwifery! I would make the same comment in respect of the one problem that I have included (after the chapter on Grammar). I invented this many years ago, when I was teaching a course at Indiana University, and it has been used since then, by me and by others, as a fairly demanding exercise in linguistic analysis. Anyone who can come up with a solution that satisfies the demands of observational and explanatory adequacy in less than two hours will not need to read the central chapters of this book! Although Language and Linguistics is very different from my Introduction to Theoretical Linguistics, it is informed with the same sense of the continuity of linguistic theory from the earliest times to the present day. I have not included a chapter on the history of linguistics as such, but within the limits of the space available for this I have tried to set some of the more important theoretical issues in their historical context. And I have written a © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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978-0-521-29775-2 - Language and Linguistics an IntroductionJohn LyonsFrontmatterMore information
Preface Xl brief chapter on structuralism, functionalism and generativism in linguistics, since the relations among these movements are, in my view, either neglected or misrepresented in most textbooks. In particular, generative grammar is commonly confused, on the one hand, with a certain kind of transformational-generative grammar, formalized by Chomsky, and, on the other, with what I have here called 'generativism', also propagated largely by Chomsky. In my own very brief treatment of generative grammar in this book, as also in my Chomsky (I977a) and elsewhere, I have tried to maintain the necessary distinctions. Personally, I am fully commit-ted to the aims of those who use generative grammars as models for the description -for theoretical, rather than practical, purposes -of the grammatical structure of natural languages. As will be evident from this book, I reject many, though not all, of the tenets of generativism. Nevertheless, I have presented them as fairly and as objectively as I can. My aim, throughout, has been to give equal weight to both the cultural and the biological basis of language. There has been a tendency in recent years to emphasize the latter to the detriment of the former. I must here record my appreciation of the assistance given to me in the writing of this book by my colleagues, Dr Richard Coates and Dr Gerald Gazdar. They have both read the whole work in draft and made many helpful critical comments, as well as supplying me with advice in areas where their expertise is greater than mine. Needless to say, they are not to be held responsible for any of the opinions expressed in the final version, the more so, as-I am happy to affirm publicly -we still disagree on a number of theoretical issues. I should also like to express my indebtedness to my wife, who has not only given me the necessary moral support and love while I was writing the book, but has also served as my model general reader for several chapters and has corrected most of the proofs for me. Once again, I have had the benefit of the specialized and sympathetic editorial advice of Dr Jeremy Mynott and Mrs Penny Carter of Cambridge University Press; and I am very grateful to them. Falmer, Sussex January 1981 © in this web service Cambridge University Presswww.cambridge.org
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