Linguistics is
the study of
language
(Crane, 1981:4). It is concerned both
in
spoken and
written
language. Crystal (1974:27)considersthat“Linguisticsisthescientificwayof studyinglanguage”. Thesedefinitionsarecompleted byFineganand Besnier,
(1989:8).
They saythatlinguistics isthescientific inquiry intohumanlanguage--intoits
structuresandusesandintorelationship
between them.
In short, linguistics
isused
empirical and scientific
approached. Linguistics is
best
regarded as
an enterprise
whose principalobjectiveis to provideanincreasinglyadequate understandingof
particularfacetsof languages,therebygradually buildingourunderstandingofthenatureoflanguageitself. Thedefinitionsoflinguisticsaboveraisestwofurtherquestions:what is themeaningof‘scientific’?andwhatis themeaningof‘language’? Scientificmeansweattempttostudylanguageinmuchthesameway as ascientiststudies physics orchemistry,that is SYSTEMATICALLY, and possible without prejudice. Then, a languageisasetofsignalsbywhichwecommunicate--to represent
thoughtsandideasbymeansofsounds(orletters). Nasr(1975)statesthatlinguisticsisscience.Insayingthatlinguistics isascience,hesays: 1. that deals
with
particular body
of
material; spoken and
written language 2. that it proceeds by operations that can
be made
known
and described;and 3.
thatthebodyoffactsitdiscoverscanbejustifiedbyreferringthem toprinciples
andtoatheory thatcanbestated.
Thepurpose of linguistics is to
examine the material and
to make general statementsaboutitsvariouselementsthatrelatetoregularrules.In itsoperations and statements
itisguided
bythree principles of science: (i) thatmaterialshouldbecomplete (ii) thatthematerialshouldshowagreementbetweenitsdifferent parts;and (iii)thatthestatementsaboutthematerialshouldbebrief;ashorter statementistobepreferredtoalongerone Whenwesaythatalinguist aimstobescientific, wemeanthathe attemptsto studylanguageinmuchthesamewayasa scientiststudies physics
or
chemistry,
that
issystematically, and as far aspossible withoutprejudice. Linguistics includesboth languagestructure(grammatical
competence)and languageuse(underlyingcommunicative
competence).Instudyingalanguage,accordingtoTraugott(1980:12- 14),linguistsstudythewaysinwhichthesound-meaning correlation
of languagesarestructuredandhowtheyfunction.Thereareseveral
waystodothis.Forexample,a
linguistanalyzesthesoundmeaning
correlation.
Some
linguists undertake
toconstruct grammars onthe basisofwhatisfoundinspecificutterances sample, forexample,
a bodyofelicitedtextsprovidedby informants.Manylinguistsare interested notonlyindescribing languages butalso inconstructing
theories, that is well-organized hypotheses about how language works. Linguistics can be divided into two broad branches, (i) pure linguistics)
and(ii)appliedlinguistics. Purelinguisticsiscomponent ofthegrammarofthelanguage,namely:
(a) phonetics:
thestudy ofspeech sound; howtheyarearticulated
(articulatoryphonetics);their physicalproperties(acoustic phonetics);andhowtheyare perceived(auditory/perceptual
phonetics) (b)
phonology:
the study of sound system
of language; how
the particularsoundusedineachlanguageformanintegratedsystem
forencoding information
andhowsuchsystem
differfromone languagetoanother (c) morphology:the
studyofwordformation;the studyof the
wayin whichwordsareconstruedoutofsmallermeaningfulunit. (d)
syntax:thestudyofphraseandsentence structure; thestudyof the
wayin whichsentencesare construed;howthe sentencesare relatedtoeachother. (e) semantics: thestudyofmeaning;
howwordsandsentences are related
tothe(real orimaginary) objects
they refer toand
the situationtheydescribe (f) pragmatics: the
study of
language use; how the meaning conveyedbyawordorsentencedependsonaspectsofthecontext in which
it
is used (such
as time,
place,
social relationship
betweenspeakerand hearer,and
speaker’sassumptionaboutthe hearer’sbeliefs) (g)discourseanalysis:thestudyofdiscourse,suchas structure information,adjacencypairs,turn-taking,etc Today,linguistics(theempiricalandscientificstudyof language)has takenonadditionalimportanceinanagewherecommunication isas important to
social, intellectual, political, economics, and
moral concernsasbefore.Inotherwords,the
resultandapplicationof linguisticscanbeappliedtosuchotherareas.Thisis
calledasapplied
linguistics,suchas: anthropological linguistics: the study of the
interrelationship
between language
and culture (particularly in the context
of
non- Westernculturesandsocieties) historical
linguistics: the study
of how languages
change through time,therelationshipsoflanguagestoeachother. (a) neurolinguistics:thestudyofthebrainandhowitfunctionsin the production,perceptionandacquisitionoflanguage. (b) psycholinguistics:
thestudyoftheinterrelationship
oflanguage
andcognitivestructure;theacquisitionoflanguage
(c) sociolinguistics:thestudyoftheinterrelationshipoflanguageand socialstructure,linguisticvariationandattitudestowardlanguage HistoryofLinguisticsAsCrane
(1998)
suggests
thatlinguistics
isthestudy oflanguage,
linguistis moreconcernedwithspokenlanguageandits anthropological, psychological and
sociological
ramification. This studyof spokenlanguagegoesbackthousandsofyears.Duringsome periods,linguistshavebeenmostinterestedin
thechangesin language
throughhistory;duringotherperiods,theyhaveconcentrated
onthe studyoflanguagesatjustonetime.Somelinguistshaveconcentrated
ondescribinghowlanguageis used;others,onhowitshouldbeused.
Languagehasbeenseenbysomelinguistsasamirrorofthemindand a key to the understanding
of
thought;
to other linguist,
mind
is irrelevanttothestudyof language.Atonetomeoranother,both empirical
studies
and philosophical
analysis have dominated
linguistics;the
earliestlinguisticinquireswerealmostpurely philosophical.
Among the
questions that early linguists asked
were Whatistheorigin ofspeech? Whatistherelationship between the humanintellectandthestructureoflanguage?Howarewordsrelated toideas? Butboththeancient Indians
andtheancient
Greeks also studiedhowwordsareproduced,formed,andchanged. TheAncientGrammariansThe earliest
grammar
of any
language,
as far
as we know, was Parnini’sgrammarofSanskrit,theclassicallanguageofIndia.Written inaboutthefourthorfifthcenturyB.C.,Parnini’sremarkable work representsahighlydevelopedapproachtolinguistics. TheancientIndianlinguistsidentifiedthe
chiefpartsofthe vocaltract involved in producing sounds, and
they associated them with particular sound segments like
p and
m. They also
studied vowel length,tone,syllables,andotheraspectsof phonetics;andthey investigated
therulesthatgovern theproper combinations
ofsound segmentsandwordsinsentences. Longago,theIndianlinguistsrecognizedtheverbascentralto a sentence.Theysawthatallotherwordsina sentencebeara
particular relationto
the verb.Buttheyalso recognizedthatnotallsentencesare grammatical. Forexample,
asentence likeThestudent readswrites
buysanovel,whichdisobeystherulethatasentencecannotcontain threeconsecutive
verbs,cannotbegrammatical.
Norcanasentence
likeTherainatethesun,whichinvolvescontradictions
inmeanings
ofthewords,beconsideredgrammatical. Ingeneral,the linguisticaccomplishmentsofthe
ancientIndian grammarians were
superior to those of their
contemporaries, the Greek.Butlikemostofthewesternsciencesandhumanities,thestudy of
language in the Western
world began
with
the ancient
Greeks. Amongtheveryearlystudiesoflanguage,Plato’sCratylusisperhaps thebestknown—largely
becauseofitsnaïveapproachinseekingthe originofwords.IfPlatowere
livingtoday,hemightseekthesource ofthewordlikecatastrophebynotingthatitseemsconsistofthree parts;whichsoundlikethewordcat,astro,andfee.Hemightpoint outthecatischaracterized
byitsabilitytostrikequickly;thatastro referstosomethingextraordinary,colossal,andoutofthisworld;and thatfeereferstosomething
costly,orsomethingthatispaid.Puttng thesemeaningtogether,Platomightthenexplainthatthe
word catastrophe means something thatis“quick, colossal, andcostly.”
Theproblem withthissimple andsuperficially
plausible
method is that almost anything can be made to
mean anything as just demonstrated.
Despite
Plato’s
misguided
approach to
the origin of words,he offeredvaluableinsightsintolanguage,includinga differentiation
between vowels
and consonants, an appreciation of wordaccent,andadivisionofthesentenceintonominalandverbal
parts. Thestudyof languagewasmorefruitfulunderPlato’ssuccessors, AristotleandDionysiusThrax.Aristotleclassifiedthepartsofspeech
in thethirdcenturyB.C.,andheis
oftenregardedasthefounderof classicalEuropeangrammar.Butthe oldestknowngrammarofGreek waswrittenby
DionysiusThrax,wholivedneartheendofthesecond centuryB.C.Thrax’sgrammar,the Technegrammatike,madeinroads
into the study ofhow
sounds
are produced; but itwas even more usefulinitstreatmentofwordclassesandfunctions. Thrax identifiedeightbasic wordclasses:nouns,verbs,pronouns,
articles,participles,prepositions,conjunctionsandadverb.He
further notedimportantpropertiesofclassesofwords—suchastheproperties of gender,number,andcasefornounsandthoseofconjugation,tense, voice,mood,
andpersonforverbs.ToThrax,theprincipal
unitsof grammatical description were the word and the sentence. He
considered
the
sentence
to
be
a group
of
words
that expresses
a complete thought—a definition that remained popular until
the
twentiethcentury. AnothermajorforceinancientGreeklinguisticswastheStoicschool ofgrammar,whichenjoyeditsgreatestsuccessinthesecondcentury B.C. TheStoics’
most valuable
contribution
wastheir treatment
of caseasagrammatical
categoryofnounsexpressedbywordendings, andtheydistinguishbetweenproperandcommonnouns. Theapproach oftheancient Greekstogrammar
wascontinued
and modified by the Romans.
Writing
in the first century
B.C.,
Varro notedthatthewordendingsdiscussedbytheStoicsandThraxcould befurther
subdivided according totype.
Some endings areusedto derive new words; others are inflectional,
indicating a word’s
relationshiptootherwordsina
sentence.Tousea
modernexample,a wordlikesunnycontainsthederivationalending–y,meaningroughly “oforpertainingto.”Thus,thewordsunnyisderivedfromthenoun sun.
The
word
sun can also take
inflectional
ending –s,
which indicatespossession. Varrorealizedthatderivational endingslike–y cannotbeattachedtoallnouns(forexample,theycannotbeattached
toVarro)butthatinflectional endingslike–saremoregeneraland canbeappliedregularlytoallnounsto
indicatepossession(Varro’s). Latingrammarachievedits mostpreciseformulationin theworksof PriscianandDonatus,whowrotegrammarsofLatinatapproximately the time
of
the Roman Empire’s decline. For centuries these
descriptive grammars
served asthebasisforlearning Latinandfor learningaboutlanguageingeneral. The Middle Ages, the
Renaissance, and the Age ofEnlightenmentAftertheFallofRomeandthroughtheDarkAges,Latincontinuedto bearespectedlanguage, bothinscholarlyandreligiouscircles.The grammars ofPriscian and
Donatus
remained
invogue
for teaching purposes,
thusensuring acontinuation
oflinguistic awareness. The first
major new
development in linguistics, however,
did not take placeuntilthe
thirteenthcentury,whenspeculative,ormodistic grammarrosetopopularity.
Speculative grammar resulted fromthecollision
oftraditional
Latin descriptive grammar and scholastic philosophy, represented by CatholicphilosopherslikeSt.ThomasAquinas.Itsoughta
theoretical basisforLatingrammarbyattemptingtospecifytheways,ormodes, by whichweperceiveandsignifythings.Thus,thespeculative grammarians sought to explain
the
differences
between parts of speechsuchasnounsandverbsbylookingfordifferencesintheways the mind perceives
the thing
referred to by
nouns and verbs. For example,achairdiffersfromtheactoflaughinginthatit
possesses existenceor substance.Thispropertyof
chairsandsimilarobjectsis perceivedbythemind,whichexpressesobjectsofthisclassbymeans ofthe partofspeechwecallnoun.Thespeculativegrammarians describedothermodesfor perceivingandsignifyingverbs,pronouns, particles and
so on.
Like
the ancient Indians, they recognized that wordsmaybe
combinedinsentencesonlyaccordingtocertain relationshipsbetweenpartsofspeechandmeaning.Although
the speculative
grammarians concentrated on Latin,
their workledto
theassumptionthatlanguagehasa
universalbasis,thatall languages areessentially thesameinnatureanddifferonlyintheir surfacecharacteristics.ThiswastheviewheldbyRogerBacon(1214- 1294),oneofthefirstspeculative grammarians, whostudiedGreek, Arabic,andHebrew,aswellasLatin. With the coming ofthe Renaissance
and Columbus’s discovery of new
world,severallinguisticdevelopmentsoccurred,and
viewsof languagebecamemorediverse.A stronginterestinliteratureandthe discovery of printingcombined to drawattention to the inconsistencies
betweenspellingandpronunciation, thusleadingtoa fullerunderstandingof theirrelationship.Furthermore,as thechiefof descendantlanguageof Latin—French,Italian,andSpanish—were
elevatedinstatus,linguistsbecamemoreawareofchangesthathad takenplacesincethe dayswhenLatinwasspokenregularly.Linguists thus were provided with
written proof of what they
had always
suspected: languages change. Finally, explorers
andmissionaries
in the Orientandthe
Americasdiscoverednewlanguagesforwhich grammars eventually were written.
Thus, the fifteenth
and the sixteenthcenturiesweremarkedby an
increasedawarenessof the differencesamonglanguages.
Then, in
the seventeenth century, the idea that beneath
these
differences alllanguages
areessentially thesameinnaturesurfaced
again.ThePortRoyalgrammarians,underthe influenceof Descartes, stressedthe universalityofthought,whichtheysaidwasreflectedin language.
Theyalsorecognized
thatcreativity isinherent inhuman language,andtheyviewedthephraseascorresponding
toacomplex idea. In many ways,
their
ideas
are similar
to
Noam Chomsky’s
moderntheoryoftransformational-generativegrammar. Whilethe
FrenchgrammariansfollowingDescarteswereinvestigating
universalgrammar,theEnglishgrammarianswerestudyingphonetics,
or thephysicalsoundsystemof language.Muchof
whatthe English discovered aboutthearticulation
ofsoundshadalreadybeenknown by theancientIndians,butonegreattriumphoftheEnglishwastheir elucidation of the relationship between pronunciation and
spelling. TheEnglishinterestinphonetics,
alongwiththediscoveryofmany
newlanguages, ledtothefirstattemptstocreateuniversalphonetic
alphabets. These
are
sets of
symbols used
to
represent
the most
commonsoundsinknownlanguages.TheworkdonebytheEnglish in universalphoneticsforeshadowedsomeofthemostimportant advancesinlinguistics. TheNineteenthCentury:LinguisticsBecomesaScienceIn
thenineteenthcentury,newdevelopmentsin
linguisticswere stimulatedby
closeattentiontoconcretedataandexcitingphilological
studies.Thus,a
newapproachemerged—historical-comparative linguistics.Theearliestsignificantworkin
comparinglanguageswas doneby WilliamJones(1747-1794),an Englishmanwhonotedcertain similaritiesamongGreek,Latin,Gothic,and Sanskrit.AlthoughJones
assumed
that these languages
had
a common
origin, he somehow
missedthe
importanceofhisdiscovery—theseedsofthe
comparative
method, which allows onetoestablish therelatedness oflanguages withina familyandtoreconstructtheprobableformsoftheoriginal parentlanguage.Throughthe
workofFranzBopp,RasmusRask,the Grimm brothersandother nineteenth centuryscholars, the comparative
method wasrecognized asascientific procedure. This procedureestablished therelatednessoftheIndo-European Languages,
a family
that
includes
Greek, Latin,
Gothic, Sanskrit, English, Russian, and others.
Soon linguists
grouped
Oriental
and otherlanguagesintosimilarfamilies.
In conclusion,
nineteenth-century linguists were challenged by
the
growth ofthenatural
sciences, andtheywerewise
enough toturn theirattention toascientific method
ofdealingwithlanguage
data. Theireffortsalsoincludedmanyfirstattemptstoexpandthehorizons
oflinguistics,
suchasthebeginnings ofacoustic phonetics andthe studyofdialectsandbilingualism. Traditional
and Structural Linguistics in the TwentiethCenturyThestudyoflinguistics
hasoftenbeendivided intosynchronic
and diachronic linguistics. Synchronic linguistics isconcerned withthe analysisofa
languageata
particulartime;forexample,Englishatthe time
of American Revolution.
It
is
also known as
descriptive linguistics.Diachroniclinguistics,or historicallinguistics,dealswith different
states oflanguage through time, such asthechanges
that tookplacebetweenOldEnglishandMiddleEnglish.In
thetwentieth century,historicalcomparativestudies,which preoccupiednineteenth- centurylinguists,haveassumeda
secondaryroleto synchronic linguistics. Fromthemid-eighteenth centuryuntiltwentieth
century,synchronic linguistics was essential normative or prescriptive;
that is, it attemptedtoprescribethenorof“proper”languageusage.Becauseit didlittlebutexpandon
theclassificationsof ancientGreekandLatin grammarians,itissometimesreferredtoastraditionallinguistics. Thestructuralisttheoryoflanguagewasthefirstmajornewapproach
todescriptive linguistic
inthetwentieth
century. Introduced
bythe Swiss
linguist
Ferdinand de
Saussure
and pioneered
in
the
United Statesby
LeonardBloomfiled,structuralistflourishedforaboutthirty years,untiltheearly1960s. Initsemphasis ontheinvestigation of concretelinguisticdata,structuralismlogicallyfollowedthe late nineteenth-century neo-grammarian school.
But, structuralism
was gearedtowarddescriptivelinguistics. Onecriticismofstructurallinguisticsis
thatit madenoattemptto deal withhowhumansunderstandandinterpretthe
meaningsof
sentences;
thatis,Bloomfield’s theoryofstructuralism
excludedthemindfrom linguisticconsideration. Forthisreason,structuralism
isoftenlinked
withthepsychologicaltheoryof
behaviorism,whichsimilarlyrestricts itselftothatwhichisconcreteandobservable. Transformational-GenerativeGrammarTransformational-Generative grammaremphasizesthat human languageis
creative—thathumanareabletoproduceandinterpretan infinitelylargenumberofsentencesthattheyhaveneverbeforeheard.
Itattemptstodescribewhatapersonknowsabouthisorherlanguage,
butitalsoclaimsthatalllanguagesaregroundedinuniversalfactsand principles. Bypostulating deepstructure, whicharerepresentations
that contain the essential
meanings of
sentences and that
underlie
actualutterances,transformational-generative grammarisindirect
oppositiontostructuralism Linguistictheory has undergoneconsiderablerevisionand modification
inthepastfifteenyears,particularly initsapproach to meaning.Linguisticshasalsodrawnonothersciencestoforma
large numberof
linguisticsubfields,mostnotablypsycholinguisticsand sociolinguistics.
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