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Definition of Language

This document provides definitions of language from several influential linguists and scholars throughout history. Ferdinand de Saussure compares language to a sheet of paper with thought on one side and sound on the other. Edward Sapir defines language as a purely human method of communicating ideas through voluntarily produced symbols. Noam Chomsky considers a language to be a set of finite length sentences constructed from a finite set of elements.
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100% found this document useful (8 votes)
12K views1 page

Definition of Language

This document provides definitions of language from several influential linguists and scholars throughout history. Ferdinand de Saussure compares language to a sheet of paper with thought on one side and sound on the other. Edward Sapir defines language as a purely human method of communicating ideas through voluntarily produced symbols. Noam Chomsky considers a language to be a set of finite length sentences constructed from a finite set of elements.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Department of Linguistics

LING 11015: Introduction to Linguistics


Hand out: 01

Definitions of Language
“A language can be compared to a sheet of paper. Thought is one side of the sheet and sound the
reverse side. Just as it is impossible to take a pair of scissors and cut one side of the paper
without at the same time cutting the other, so it is impossible in a language to isolate sound from
thought, or thought from sound.”
- Ferdinand de Saussure (1916)
Course in General Linguistics
“Language is a purely human and non-instinctive method of communicating ideas, emotions and
desires by means of voluntarily produced symbols.”
- Edward Sapir (1921)
Language: An Introduction to the Study of Speech
“From now on I will consider a language to be a set of sentences, each finite in length and
constructed out of a finite set of elements.”
- Noam Chomsky (1957)
Syntactic Structures
“Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols, by means of which human beings as members
of a social group and participants in a culture, interact and communicate.”
- Bernard Bloch and George L. Trager (1962)
Encyclopaedia Britannica
“Language is behaviour which utilises body parts: the vocal apparatus and the auditory system
for oral language; brachial apparatus and the visual system for sign language… such body parts
are controlled by none other than the brain for their functions.”
- Fred C. C. Peng (2005)
Language in the Brain: Critical Assessments
Continuum
“A language consists of symbols that convey meaning, plus rules for combining those symbols,
that can be used to generate and infinite variety of messages.”
- Wayne Weiten (2007)
Psychology: Themes and Variations (7th ed.)
“We can define language as a system of communication using sounds or symbols that enables us
to express our feeling, thoughts, ideas and experiences.”
- E. Bruce Goldstein (2008)
Cognitive Psychology: Connecting Mind, Research
and Everyday Experience (2nd ed.)

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