Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Flussdiagrammknoten
- We live in a world of language and is “ the human essence".
- Language is the
source of human life and power and distinguishes humans from other animals.
- When you know a language, you can speak and be understood by others who know that language.
- Knowledge of the Sound System
- Part of knowing a language means knowing what sounds (or signs1) are in that language and what sounds are not.
- Also knowing which sounds may start a word, end a word, and follow each other.
- One way this unconscious knowledge is revealed is by the way speakers of one language pronounce words from another.
- Knowing a language means also knowing that certain sequences of sounds signify certain concepts or meanings.
- Arbitrary Relation of Form and Meaning
- The relationship between speech sounds and the meanings they represent is, for the most part, an arbitrary one.
- When you are acquiring a language you have to learn that the sounds represented by the letters.
- the words of a particular language have the meanings they do only by convention.
- This conventional and arbitrary relationship between the form (sounds) and meaning (concept) of a word is also true in sign languages.
- Over time these signs may change, just as the pronunciation of words changes, and the miming effect is lost.
- Like buzz or murmur that imitate the sounds associated with the objects or actions they refer to.
- Sounds differ from language to language, reflecting the particular sound system of the language
- Sometimes particular sound sequences seem to relate to a particular concept.
- In English many words beginning with "gl" relate to sight.
- Such as glare, glint, gleam, glitter, glossy, glaze, glance, glimmer, glimpse, and glisten.
- "Gl" may have nothing to do with “sight” in another language, or even in other words in English
- Such as gladiator, glucose, glory, glutton, globe, and so on.
- The Creativity of Linguistic Knowledge
- Knowing a language means being able to produce new sentences never spoken before and to understand sentences never heard before.
- The creative aspect of language use.
- Language is a set of learned responses to stimuli.
- These sounds are not part of language.
- Our creative ability also includes our understanding of new or novel sentences.
- You may not believe the sentence; you may question its logic.
- Creativity is a universal property of human language.
- Even some involuntary cries like “ouch” contain only the sounds found in the language.