An introduction to language:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Fort Worth [u.a.]
Harcourt Brace
1998
|
Ausgabe: | 6. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVII, 566 S. Ill., Kt. |
ISBN: | 003018682X |
Internformat
MARC
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100 | 1 | |a Fromkin, Victoria |d 1923-2000 |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)11895573X |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a An introduction to language |c Victoria Fromkin ; Robert Rodman |
250 | |a 6. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Fort Worth [u.a.] |b Harcourt Brace |c 1998 | |
300 | |a XVII, 566 S. |b Ill., Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804126530486403072 |
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adam_text | Contents
Preface
ix
Parti
The Nature
of Human Language
Chapter
1
What Is Language?
Linguistic Knowledge
4
Knowledge of the
Sound System
..............................4
Knowledge of Words
......................5
Arbitrary Relation of Form
and Meaning
..........................5
The Creativity of Linguistic
Knowledge
..................................9
Knowledge of Sentences and
Nonsentences
..........................11
Linguistic Knowledge
and Performance
12
What Is Grammar?
14
Descriptive Grammars
....................14
Prescriptive Grammars
....................15
Teaching Grammars
........................17
Language
Universals 18
Sign Language: Evidence for
Language
Universals..................20
American Sign
Language (ASL)
....................21
Animal Languages
Ш
Talking Parrots
............................93
The Birds and the Bees
.,................24
What We «now about Language
26
Summary
27
References for Further Reading
......
Ш
Exercises
29
Chapter
2
Brain and Language
The Human Brain
34
The Modularity of the Brain...
.........35
Evidence from Childhood
Brain Lesions
..........................38
Split Brains
................................40
More Experimental Evidence
....49,
More Evidence for Modularity
.....„.43
Aphasia
.........................,.„....„.44
Distinct Categories of
Conceptual Knowledge
........48
The Autonomy of Language
49
Asymmetry of Abilities
....................49
Laura
........................................49
Christopher
................................50
Genetic Evidence for
Language Autonomy
..................51
The Evolution of Language
51
In the Beginning:
The Origin of Language..
............51
God s Gift to Mankind?
..............53
The First Language
....................53
Human Invention or the
Cries of Nature?
...............
,,,.Μ
The Development of language
In the Species
..........................
..5b
Summary
M
References for Further
кшііпз
,,..,.58
Exercises
Ш
xii Contents
Part
2
Grammatical Aspects of Language
Chapter
3
Morphology:
The Words of Language
Dictionaries
65
Classes of Words
67
Lexical Content Words
..................67
Function Words
..............................67
Morphemes: The Minimal Units
of Meaning
68
Bound and Free Morphemes
..........70
Prefixes and Suffixes
..................71
Infixes
........................................72
Circumfixes
................................73
Huckles and Ceives
........................73
Rules of Word Formation
75
Lexical Gaps
..................................76
Derivational Morphology
................76
Pullet Surprises
............................80
Sign Language Morphology
81
Word Coinage
89
Compounds
..................................83
Meaning of Compounds
............85
Universality of Compounding
....86
Acronyms
......................................86
Back-Formations
............................87
Abbreviations
................................88
Words from Names
........................88
Blends
............................................89
Grammatical Morphemes
89
Inflectional Morphemes
................90
Exceptions and
Supputions
......92
Morphology and Syntax
................93
Morphological Analysis:
Identifying Morphemes
95
Summary
96
References for Further Reading
......98
Exercises
98
Chapter
4
Syntax:
The Sentence Patterns
of Language
Grammatical or Ungrammatical?
106
What Grammaticality
Is Based On
..............................107
What Grammaticality
Is Not Based On
......................108
What Else Do You Know
about Syntax?
109
Sentence Structure
111
Syntactic Categories
....................112
Phrase Structure Trees
..................114
More Phrase Structure Trees
........116
The Infinitude of Language
..........118
Phrase Structure Rules
120
Growing Trees: The
Relationship between
Phrase Structure Rules and
Phrase Structure Trees
............122
Trees That Won t Grow
................126
Rules in Other Languages
........128
More Phrase Structure Rules
........129
The Lexicon
133
Subcategorization
........................134
More Lexical Differences
..............135
Sentence Relatedness
136
Transformational Rules
..................137
Long-Distance Relationships
........143
Wh- Sentences
..........................144
More about Sentence Structure
145
Sign Language Syntax
..................147
Summary
148
References for
Further Reading
......................148
Exercises
149
Chapter
5
The Meanings of Language
Lexical Semantics (Word Meanings)
158
Semantic Properties
....................159
Evidence for Semantic
Properties
............................160
Semantic Properties
and the Lexicon
..................161
More Semantic Relationships
..162
-nyms
......................................162
Homonyms and Polysemy
........163
Synonyms
................................165
Antonyms
................................166
Formation of Antonyms
......167
Hyponyms
................................168
Metonyms
................................168
Retronyms............
....................168
Proper Names
..............................168
Phrase and Sentence Meaning
171
Phrasal Meaning
..........................172
Noun-Centered Meaning
........172
Sense and Reference
..........174
Verb-Centered Meaning
..........175
Thematic Roles
....................175
Thematic Roles in Other
Languages
..................177
The Theta-Criterion
........178
Sentential Meaning
......................178
The Truth of Sentences
........178
Paraphrase
..............................179
Entailment
..............................180
Contradiction
..........................180
When Semantics and
Syntax Meet
............................181
Words versus Phrases
..............181
When Passives Do Not Work
....182
Pronouns and
Coreferentiality
....................183
When Rules Are Broken
184
Anomaly: No Sense and
Nonsense
........................«...„.184
Metaphor
....................................187
Idioms
..........................................188
Contents
xiii
Pragmatics
190
Linguistic Context: Discourse
........191
Pronouns
................................191
Anaphora
............................192
Missing Parts
........................193
The Articles The and A
............194
Situational Context
......................195
Maxims of Conversation
..........195
Speech Acts
............................197
Presuppositions
......................198
Deixis
..........................................199
Summary
201
References for Further Reading....
203
Exercises
204
Chapter
6
Phonetics:
The Sounds of Language
Sound Segments
213
Identity of Speech Sounds
..........215
Spelling and Speech
216
The Phonetic Alphabet
................218
Articulatory Phonetics
221
Airstream Mechanisms
..................222
Consonants
..................................223
Places of Articulation
..............223
Bilabiate: [p][b][m]
............223
Labiodentals: [f] [v]
............224
Interdentals:
[θ]
[ö]
..............224
Alveolars:
[t] [d] [n] [s] [z] [I] [r]
....224
Palatals:
[J]/[š] [3]/[ž] [č] [j]
..224
Velars:
[k] [g] [q].
.................224
Uvulars:
[r] [q] [g].........
.......224
Glottal:
[?] [hj......................224
Manners of
Articulation
..........9,25
Voiced and
Voiceless Sounds
,..,...,.,..§25
Aspirated and
Unaspirated Sounds...
ШЬ
Nasal
anć
Oral Sounds
........228
Stops: [p][b][m][t][d]
дШПбПЈП?]
....229
xiv Contents
Fricatives: [s]
[z] [f] [v]
[θ]
[б]
[š] [ž]
....................230
Affricates
............................231
Liquids: [I]
[r]
......................232
Glides:
[j] [w]
......................232
Phonetic Symbols for American
Enslish Consonants
..............233
Vowels
........................................234
Tonsue Position
......................235
Lip Rounding
..........................236
Diphthongs
..............................236
Nasalization of Vowels
............237
Tense and Lax Vowels
..............238
Dialect Differences
..................238
Major Classes
................................239
Noncontinuants and
Continuants
........................239
Obstruents and Sonorants
......239
Consonants and Vowels
..........239
Labials: [p][b][m][f][v]
....239
Coronals: [d][t][n][s]
[z][S][ž][č][J]
................239
Anterior
..............................240
Sibilants:
[s][z][šl[ž][č][J]
..240
Syllabic Sounds
........................240
Prosodie
Suprasegmental
Features
..................................240
Tone and Intonation
................240
Diacritics
242
Phonetic Symbols and
Spellins
Correspondences
243
Sign-Language Primes
245
Summary
247
References for
Further Reading
......................248
Exercises
248
Chapter
7
Phonology:
The Sound Patterns
of Language
Phonemes: The Phonological
Units of Language
254
Sounds That Contrast
..................254
Minimal Pairs
............................255
Free Variation
..........................257
Minimal Pairs in ASL
................258
Phonemes, Phones,
and Allophones
......................259
Complementary Distribution
....261
Distinctive Features
262
Feature Values
..............................262
Predictability of Redundant
(Nondistinctive) Features
....264
Unpredictability of Phonemic
Features
..............................266
More on Redundancies
..........267
Syllable Structure
........................269
Sequential Constraints
269
Lexical Gaps
............................271
Natural Classes
271
Feature Specifications for
American English Consonants
and Vowels
..............................273
More on
Prosodie
Phonology
274
Intonation
....................................274
Word Stress
..................................276
Sentence and Phrase Stress
........278
The Rules of Phonology
279
Assimilation Rules
........................280
Feature Changing Rules
................283
Dissimilation Rules
........................284
Feature Addition Rules
................284
Segment Deletion and
Addition Rules
........................285
Movement (Metathesis) Rules
......287
From One to Many and
from Many to One
..................288
The Function of
Phonological Rules
..................291
Slips of the Tongue: Evidence
for Phonological Rules
............292
The Pronunciation of Morphemes
293
Morphophonemics
......................295
More Sequential Constraints
........297
Phonological Analysis:
Discovering Phonemes
300
Summary
303
References for
Further Reading
......................305
Exercises
306
Contents
xv
Part
З
The Psychology of Language
Chapter
8
Language Acquisition
Stages in Language Acquisition
318
The First Sounds
..........................319
Babbling
......................................320
First Words
..................................321
The Two-Word Stage
....................324
From Telegraph to Infinity
............325
Theories of Child
Language Acquisition
ЗЙ8
Do Children Learn
by Imitation?
............................
ЗЙ8
Do Children Leam
by Reinforcement?
..................
ЗЙ9
Do Children Learn Language
by Analogy?
............................330
Children Form Rules and
Construct a Grammar
..............331
Errors or Rules?
............................333
The Acquisition
of Phonology
..........................333
Acquisition of Morphology
..........334
The Acquisition of Syntax
............336
Learning the Meaning
of Words
..................................337
The Biological Foundations of Language
Acquisition
339
the Innateness Hypothesis
........339
The Critical-Age Hypothesis
......344
The Acquisition of Bird
lîoi iţjs
..344
The Acquisition of
ASI
..................345
¡.earning a Second (or Third or
. «.)
Theories of SecuiKJ-Lancjuac^
Acquisition
.............................
Ми
Second-Language leaching
Methods.....
.........................349
Can Chimps Learn Human Language?
350
Gua
........................................351
Viki
..........................................351
Washoe
....................................351
Sarah
......................................351
Learning Yerkish
......................352
Koko
........................................352
Nim Chimpsky
..........................353
Clever Hans
..............................354
Kanzi
......................................355
Summary
355
References for Further Reading.
...357
Exercises
358
Humans and
The Human Mind at Work:
Human Language Processing
361
Comprehension
..........................363
The Speech Signal
..................363
Speech Perception and
Comprehension
..................365
Comprehension Models and
Experimental Studies
..........367
Lexical Access and Word
Recognition
....................367
Syntactic Processing
................369
Speech Production
......................370
Planning Units
..........................370
Lexical Selection.
....................,3/1
Application and
Misapplication
Ы Кикл
........
Ћ Ш
Non
linguistic
Influí
л
ias
.........
.з/з
іШІСиіа
aii
WüiíC.
MJhìpM i>;i
Processing of Human
!..апі{Пй<-г<;,-
Machíne
Translation
....................3/4
ľext
Processing
............................37?)
Computers
That Talk and Listen.
...376
talking Machines (Speech
Synthesis)
............................377
xvi Contents
Knowing What to Say
..........379
Machines for Understanding
Speech
................................381
Speech Recognition
............382
Speech Understanding
........383
Parsing
............................383
Semantic Processing
........386
Pragmatic Processing
......387
Computer Models of Grammars
388
Summary
389
References for Further Reading
..,.391
Exercises
392
Part
4
Language in Society
Chapter
10
Language ¡n Society
Dialects
399
Regional Dialects
..........................400
Accents
........................................401
Dialects of English
402
Phonological Differences
..............403
Lexical Differences
......................404
Dialect Atlases
..............................404
Syntactic Differences
....................406
The Standard
407
Language Purists
..........................408
Banned Languages
......................409
The Revival of Languages
..............411
African American English (AAE)
412
Phonology of African American
English
....................................413
R-Deletion
................................413
L-Deletion
................................413
Consonant Cluster
Simplification
......................413
Neutralization of [i] and
[ε]
before Nasals
......................414
/oj/^/o/
..................................414
Loss of Interdental
Fricatives
............................414
Syntactic Differences between
AAEandSAE
..........................414
Double Negatives
....................414
Deletion of the Verb Be
........415
Habitual Be
..........................415
History of African American
English
....................................416
Latino (Hispanic) English
417
Chicano
English (ChE)
..................419
Phonological Variables
of ChE
..................................419
Syntactic Variables in ChE
........420
Lingua
Francas
420
Pidgins and Creoles
421
Pidgins
........................................422
Creoles
........................................425
Styles, Slang, and Jargon
425
Styles
..........................................425
Slang
............................................426
Jargon and Argot
........................427
Taboo or Not Taboo?
428
Euphemisms
................................432
Racial and National Epithets
........433
Language, Sex, and Gender
434
Marked and Unmarked Forms
......435
The Generic He
........................437
Language and Gender
................438
Secret Languages and
Language Games
439
Summary
440
References for
Further Reading
......................442
Exercises
443
Contents
xvii
Chapter
11
Language Change;
The Syllables of Time
The Regularity of Sound Change
450
Sound Correspondences
............451
Ancestral Protolansuases
........,,..451
Phonological Change
452
Phonological Rules
......................453
The Great Vowel Shift
..................454
Morphological Change
456
Syntactic Change
457
Lexical Change
459
Borrowings
.......................,..........459
History and
Borrowed Words
................460
New Words
.........................,........469
Loss of Words
..............................
Ш,
Semantic Change
........................463
Broadening···.· · .···...·.·
......·.....463
Narrowing....
............................463
Meaning Shifts
........................463
Reconstructing Dead languages
464
The Nineteenth-Century
Comparativists
........................464
Cognates
................................465
Comparative Reconstruction
........467
Historical Evidence
......................470
Extinct and Endangered Languages
472
The Genetic Classification
of Languages
473
Languages of the World
..............476
Types of Languages
478
Why Do Languages Change?
480
Summary
482
References for
Further Reading
......................483
Exercises
483
Chapter
12
Writing:
The ABCs of Language
The History of Writing
492
Pictograms and ideograms
..........493
Cuneiform Writing
........................495
The Rebus Principle.,
....................497
From Hieroglyphs
to the Alphabet
......................498
Modern Writing Systems
499
Word Writing
................................499
Syllabic Writing
............................500
Consonantal Alphabet
Writing
...................................
.БОЯ
Alphabetic Writing
......................502
Reading, Writing, and Speech
505
Reading
........................................507
Spelling
........................................507
Spelling Pronunciations
................511
Summary
512
References for
Further Reading
......................513
Exercises
513
Glossary
Index
519
541
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Fromkin, Victoria 1923-2000 Rodman, Robert |
author_GND | (DE-588)11895573X |
author_facet | Fromkin, Victoria 1923-2000 Rodman, Robert |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Fromkin, Victoria 1923-2000 |
author_variant | v f vf r r rr |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV011943796 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | P106 |
callnumber-raw | P106 |
callnumber-search | P106 |
callnumber-sort | P 3106 |
callnumber-subject | P - Philology and Linguistics |
classification_rvk | CC 4700 ER 550 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)245934718 (DE-599)BVBBV011943796 |
dewey-full | 410 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 410 - Linguistics |
dewey-raw | 410 |
dewey-search | 410 |
dewey-sort | 3410 |
dewey-tens | 410 - Linguistics |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft Philosophie Literaturwissenschaft |
edition | 6. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Einführung |
id | DE-604.BV011943796 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T18:18:55Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 003018682X |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-008074069 |
oclc_num | 245934718 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 DE-703 DE-29 DE-11 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 DE-703 DE-29 DE-11 DE-188 |
physical | XVII, 566 S. Ill., Kt. |
publishDate | 1998 |
publishDateSearch | 1998 |
publishDateSort | 1998 |
publisher | Harcourt Brace |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Fromkin, Victoria 1923-2000 Verfasser (DE-588)11895573X aut An introduction to language Victoria Fromkin ; Robert Rodman 6. ed. Fort Worth [u.a.] Harcourt Brace 1998 XVII, 566 S. Ill., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 s DE-604 Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s 1\p DE-604 Rodman, Robert Verfasser aut Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=008074069&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Fromkin, Victoria 1923-2000 Rodman, Robert An introduction to language Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4074250-7 (DE-588)4014777-0 (DE-588)4151278-9 |
title | An introduction to language |
title_auth | An introduction to language |
title_exact_search | An introduction to language |
title_full | An introduction to language Victoria Fromkin ; Robert Rodman |
title_fullStr | An introduction to language Victoria Fromkin ; Robert Rodman |
title_full_unstemmed | An introduction to language Victoria Fromkin ; Robert Rodman |
title_short | An introduction to language |
title_sort | an introduction to language |
topic | Linguistik (DE-588)4074250-7 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Linguistik Englisch Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=008074069&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT fromkinvictoria anintroductiontolanguage AT rodmanrobert anintroductiontolanguage |