Notes on Language: Basic Concepts for UGC NET Examination
1. Definition and Nature of Language
- Language: A system of communication using sounds, symbols, or gestures that are combined according to rules to convey information, express thoughts, and establish social relationships.
- Key Characteristics:
- Arbitrariness: No inherent connection between words and their meanings.
- Productivity: The ability to create new and unique expressions.
- Displacement: The capability to talk about things not present in the immediate environment.
- Duality of Patterning: Language operates on two levels—sounds and meaning.
2. Functions of Language
- Informative Function: Conveying information and facts.
- Expressive Function: Expressing emotions, feelings, and attitudes.
- Directive Function: Directing or influencing the behavior of others.
- Phatic Function: Establishing and maintaining social relationships.
- Metalinguistic Function: Discussing language itself.
- Poetic Function: Focus on the aesthetic qualities of language.
Notes on Language: Basic Concepts for UGC NET Examination
3. Components of Language
- Phonetics: The study of speech sounds, their production, and perception.
- Phonology: The study of how sounds function within a particular language or languages.
- Morphology: The study of the structure and form of words.
- Syntax: The study of sentence structure and the rules that govern the formation of sentences.
- Semantics: The study of meaning in language.
- Pragmatics: The study of how context influences the interpretation of meaning.
4. Phonetics and Phonology
- Phonetics:
- Articulatory Phonetics: How speech sounds are produced.
- Acoustic Phonetics: The physical properties of speech sounds.
- Auditory Phonetics: How speech sounds are perceived.
- Phonology:
- Phonemes: The smallest units of sound that can change meaning.
- Allophones: Variations of phonemes that do not change meaning.
- Minimal Pairs: Pairs of words that differ by only one phoneme.
Notes on Language: Basic Concepts for UGC NET Examination
5. Morphology
- Morphemes: The smallest units of meaning.
- Free Morphemes: Can stand alone as words (e.g., "book").
- Bound Morphemes: Cannot stand alone and must be attached to other morphemes (e.g., "un-" in "unhappy").
- Types of Morphological Processes:
- Affixation: Adding prefixes, suffixes, infixes, or circumfixes to words.
- Compounding: Combining two or more words to create a new word (e.g., "toothpaste").
- Reduplication: Repeating all or part of a word to create a new word or form (e.g., "bye-bye").
- Suppletion: Using an entirely different form to fill a gap in a paradigm (e.g., "go" and "went").
Notes on Language: Basic Concepts for UGC NET Examination
6. Syntax
- Sentence Structure: The arrangement of words in a sentence to convey meaning.
- Syntactic Categories: Different types of words and phrases that function in specific ways in sentences (e.g., nouns, verbs, adjectives).
- Phrase Structure Rules: Rules that define the structure of phrases in a language.
- Transformational Grammar: A theory by Noam Chomsky that describes how changes in word order can transform sentences (e.g., active to passive voice).
7. Semantics
- Lexical Semantics: The study of word meanings and word relations.
- Synonymy: Words with similar meanings.
- Antonymy: Words with opposite meanings.
- Hyponymy: Words that are more specific instances of a general term.
- Polysemy: A single word having multiple related meanings.
- Compositional Semantics: How meanings of individual words combine to form meanings of larger units like phrases and sentences.
Notes on Language: Basic Concepts for UGC NET Examination
8. Pragmatics
- Speech Acts: Actions performed via utterances (e.g., asserting, questioning, commanding).
- Deixis: Words that cannot be understood without context (e.g., "this", "that", "here", "there").
- Implicature: Meaning inferred from context rather than explicitly stated.
- Presupposition: Background assumptions implied by utterances.
9. Language Acquisition
- First Language Acquisition: The process by which children learn their native language.
- Stages: Babbling, one-word stage, two-word stage, telegraphic speech.
- Second Language Acquisition: The process by which people learn an additional language.
- Theories: Behaviorist (imitation and reinforcement), Nativist (innate language ability), Interactionist (social interaction).
Notes on Language: Basic Concepts for UGC NET Examination
10. Sociolinguistics
- Language Variation: Differences in language use among different social groups.
- Dialects: Regional or social variations of a language.
- Registers: Variations in language use depending on context (e.g., formal vs. informal).
- Pidgins and Creoles: Simplified languages that develop for communication between groups without a common language; Creoles evolve from pidgins and become native languages.
11. Psycholinguistics
- Language Processing: How the brain understands and produces language.
- Language and Thought: The relationship between linguistic structures and cognitive processes.
Notes on Language: Basic Concepts for UGC NET Examination
12. Historical Linguistics
- Language Change: How languages evolve over time.
- Sound Change: Changes in pronunciation.
- Semantic Change: Changes in word meanings.
- Grammaticalization: The process by which words develop new grammatical functions.
13. Applied Linguistics
- Language Teaching: Methods and principles for teaching languages.
- Translation Studies: The theory and practice of translating texts from one language to another.
- Forensic Linguistics: The application of linguistic knowledge to legal issues.
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