Language Note
Language Note
Grammar: Grammar is the system of rules that determine how our thoughts
can be expressed. (Feldman)
Grammar is the set of rules that explain how words are used in a language.
(Merriam-Webster)
Grammar is the systematic study and description of a language. ( Richard
Nordquist)
The basic structure of rules rests on grammar, the system of rules that
determine how our thoughts can be expressed. Grammar deals with three major
components of language:
i) Phonology
ii) Syntax and
iii) Semantics
ii) Syntax: Syntax refers to the rules that indicate how words and phrases can
be combined to form sentences. Every language has intricate rules that guide
the order in which words may be strung together to communicate meaning.
English speakers have no difficulty recognizing that “TV down the turn” is not a
meaningful sequence, whereas “Turn down the TV” is. To understand the effect
of syntax in English, consider the changes in meaning caused by the different
word orders in the following three utterances: “John kidnapped the boy,” “John,
the kidnapped boy,” and “The boy kidnapped John”
Again, boy and man share certain semantic features (both refer to males), but
they also differ semantically (in terms of age).
1.5 Influence of Language: Do Eskimos Have More Words for Snow Than
Texans Do?
It makes sense, and arguments that the Eskimo language has many more words
than English does for snow have been made since the early 1900s. At that time,
linguist Benjamin Lee Whorf contended that because snow is so relevant to
Eskimos’ lives, their language provides a particularly rich vocabulary to
describe it—considerably larger than what we find in other languages, such as
English.
Still, the linguistic relativity hypothesis has not been entirely discarded. In
short, although research does not support the linguistic-relativity hypothesis
that language causes thought, it is clear that language influences how we think.
And, of course, it certainly is the case that thought influences language,
suggesting that language and thinking interact in complex ways (Ross et al,
2004)
1.4 Understanding Language Acquisition: Identifying the roots of language
There are enormous strides that are made in language development throughout
childhood. Psychologists have offered two major explanations for it:
One is based on learning theory and the other on innate processes.
. Babbling: Infants produce many sounds before they say their first
words. They cry, they laugh, and they yell in anger. But until 5 or 6
months of age, they do not produce sounds that resemble a human
language. The first sounds that do resemble language which occur
during what is called the babbling stage, seem to be a mixture of the
phonemes adults use. During this stage, infants will produce such
sounds quite frequently, sometimes with no one else around.
Psychologists call these sounds spontaneous babbling.
Gradually babbling sounds become progressive similar to the parents’
native language. This means that Chinese infants begin to make
sounds that resemble Chinese words, while French infants begin to
produce sounds that resemble French words. In most cases, this
shaping process takes place through infant’s interactions with their
parents.
adding -s to nouns and to form the past tense by adding -ed to verbs.
This skill also leads to errors, since children tend to apply rules
inflexibly. This leads to overgeneralisation of the rules. Children
employ rules even when doing so results in errors. it is correct to say
“he walked” for the past tense of walk, the -ed rule doesn’t work quite
so well when children say “he runned” for the past tense of run.
● Embedded Sentence: An embedded sentence is a sentence
“Daddy is here” and adds a phrase to the end that converts the
sentence to a question. “Daddy is here, isn’t he?” this is called a tag
question because the minor addition or tag at the end of the
declarative statement(“Daddy is here”) converts it to a question.