第一章、语言与语言学
第一章语言与语言学介绍PPT课件

• 语言学家研究语言,可以在两个地方找 到它的踪影。(p16页)
• 一是在说出的话(作品)里——语言的客观 存在形式首先表现为有声的口头语言即 口语,而当出现了文字以后,又表现为 有形的书面语言即书面语。
• 二是存在于说话人的脑子里。
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第二节 语言是符号系统
• 三、言语和语言
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第四节 语言学的任务
• (三)希腊-罗马 • 1.希腊 • 狄俄尼修斯·特拉克斯《语法术》
(前1世纪)——第一部系统的希腊 语法。 • 阿波洛尼·狄斯科勒斯《论句法》 (前2世纪)——西方第一部句法著 作。
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第四节 语言学的任务
• 2.古罗马 • 全盘继承了希腊人的文化,照搬希腊语
法体系,硬套在拉丁语上。 • 多纳图斯《语法学》(4世纪)——西
• 五百罗汉渡江,岸畔波心千佛子; • 一位美人映月,人间天上两婵娟。
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第四节 语言学的任务
• 一、语言学的三大发源地
• 中国、印度、希腊-罗马
• (一)古代中国
• “小学”:音韵学、训诂学和文字学
• (二)古代印度(吠陀时期起,约前 1200-前1000)
❖ 语法学:巴尼尼语法
❖(三)希腊-罗马
• (一)功能
• 1.人类语言功能开放
• 是个开放的系统,能够传递的信息无限 的丰富多样。能够造出无穷的句子,能 传递无限多的信息。
• 2.动物“语言”封闭
• 是现场的刺激引起的,所能传递的信息
种类有限,可以列举。
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第一节 语言是人类特有的财富 一、为什么语言是人类特有的
• a.想说什么说什么 b.想啥时说啥时说 c.一种话多样说 d.想说多少说多少 e.话里有话(正话反说,反话正说) f.有的说,没的也说
语言学概论完整版复习资料

第一章语言和语言学1.语言与各个领域的社会活动都有着密切的联系,在这种情况下,语言学必须明确自己的研究对象,才能成为一门现代意义上的科学。
2.任何符号,包括语言符号都是形式和意义的统一体。
3.什么是语言的客观存在形式语言的客观存在形式首先表示为有声的口头语言即口语,而当出现了文字以后,又表现为有形的书面语言即书面语。
4.语言符号的强制性正因为语言符号是社会约定俗成的,因此在同一社会,同一时代,对使用同一种语言的每一个社会成员来说是强制性的,是不能任意改变的,因为如果个人可以任意改变,那就互相听不懂了,也就从根本上丧失了交际工具的作用。
5.语言与言语的区别语言是言语活动中同一社会群体共同掌握的、有规律可循而又成系统的那一部分;而含有个人要素或个人杂质的说话行为和说出来的话只能属于言语。
第二章语音1.声音的四要素:音高,音强,音长,音质2.振幅:也就是发音体振动时离开平衡位置的最大偏移距离。
3.频率:发音体在每一秒钟内振动的次数。
4.音高:就是声音的高低。
它是由频率的大小决定的。
频率同音高成正比。
频率越大,声音越高;频率越小,声音越低。
5.音强:就是声音的强弱。
它是由振幅的大小决定的。
振幅同音强成正比,振幅的大小又决定于使发音体振动外力的大小。
外力大,振幅就大,声音就强;外力小,振幅就小,声音就弱。
6.音长:就是声音的长短。
它是由发音体振动的持续时间决定的。
发音体振动的持续时间长,声音就长;发音体振动的时间短,声音就短。
7.基音:振动中有一个频率最低的振动,由它发出的声音叫做“基音”。
其他振动发出的声音叫做“陪音”。
8.乐音:当基音的频率的陪音的频率之间存在着整数倍的比例关系时,会形成一种复杂而有规则的,具有周期性重复特征的声波形式,这种声音叫做乐音。
9.噪音:如果基音的频率和陪音的频率之间不存在整倍数的比例关系,就会形成一种杂乱无章的不规则的声波形式,这种声音叫做噪音。
10.语音的生理基础:语音是由人的发音器官协同动作而产生的,人的发音及其运动是“语音的生理基础”,决定着语音的生理特征。
语言学概论复习资料

第一章语言和语言学第一节认识人类的语言一、语言的性质和类型1.只有人类才有语言【领会】语言是人类所独有的。
人类的语言跟动物的“语言”相比较,有几个显著和重要的特点:一是“内容更多”。
多种场合、多种方式、多种内容。
二是“用处更大”。
主要:交际功能。
其它:标志、记录、思维、认知,等等。
三是“能够创造”。
具有离散性,能用有限的声音和意义按照一定规则组配成无限的话语。
2.语言和民族、国家的关系【领会】大多数情况:一个民族使用一种语言。
但不能把“相互能够听懂”作为确定语言的标准,并进一步作为确定民族和国家的标准。
这种理解只适合于欧洲的“新兴民族国家”,对一个历史悠久、幅员辽阔的国家是不适应的。
尽管“语言”是最直观、最容易识别的民族标志,但事实上还不是最可靠的标志。
从目前了解到的情况来看,“共同的历史文化传统和由此产生的民族认同感”也许是维系一个民族的最根本的因素,因而也是确定一个民族的最根本的标准。
3.语言的谱系分类和语言的形态分类【领会】语言的谱系分类就是从“历时”演变角度划分不同的语言,是根据各种语言在语音、语汇、语法等方面是否有共同来源和相似性的大小对语言进行的分类。
也叫“语言的亲属关系分类”。
从语言的“共时”角度来划分不同的语言,可以建立“语言的形态分类”,也叫“语言的结构类型分类”。
可分为“形态语”和“孤立语”,或者分成“综合性语言”和“分析性语言”。
4.语系、语族;屈折语、孤立语;综合性语言、分析性语言【识记】谱系分类层级:语系、语族、(语支)、语言、方言、次方言(土语)。
语系是根据语言有无历史同源关系划分出来的语言类别,是语言谱系中最大的类。
语系的下一级叫作“语族”,同一语族的语言不但有相同的来源,相似点也更多。
形态语(综合性语言)指通过词的形态变化来体现各种结构意义的语言。
包括“屈折语、黏着语”等小类。
如俄语、维吾尔语。
孤立语(分析性语言)指没有形态变化的语言。
如汉语。
屈折语主要是句子中某些词本身有丰富的形态变化,是形态语中的一个小类。
第一章 语言和语言学

四、语言的结构类型
• 上面的四种分类只是一种大体上的分类,实际上各 个语言的情况都很复杂,单纯属于上面某一类的语 言很少,大多数语言都是大体上属于某一类,也有 一些不属于这类语言类型的特点。 • 语言的词法分类也可以根据形态变化是否丰富把世 界上的语言分为三类:综合语、分析语、综合—— 分析语。综合语的主要特点是词有丰富的形态变化, 如德语、俄语等;分析语的主要特点是缺乏形态变 化,词序和虚词是主要的语法手段,如汉语等;综 合——分析语是介于综合语和分析语之间的一种语 言,既有综合语的特点,有一定的形态变化,又有 分析语的特点,词序和虚词的作用也比较大,如英 语等。
• 语言符号的组合规则主要体现在结构和功能两个方面。 由两个较小的语言片断组合成较大的语言片断以后, 较小的语言片断之间就发生了结构关系。两个词语能 否构成某种结构关系,是由词语的功能决定的。
三、语言的基本关系
• 语言系统中的符号与符号之间,存在着各种复杂的联 系,但这些复杂的联系可以概括为两种基本关系:组 合关系和聚合关系。 • (一)组合关系 • 若干较小的语言单位组合成较大的语言单位,其构成 成分之间的关系就是组合关系,又称线性序列关系。 • 组合关系也就是结构关系,有相同组合关系的语言单 位构成的类,就是结构类。 • 组合关系在语言的各个子系统中普遍存在。 • 词语之间的组合是有规则的。 • 语言单位之间的组合是有层次性的。
二、语言的子系统
• (一)语音系统 • 每一种语言的语音要素都是自成系统的。语音系统 由音位和音节两级单位构成。语音的系统性主要体 现在音位之间的对立和音节内部的组合两个方面。 • (二)语义系统 • 每一种语言的语义要素也是自成系统的。一种语言 的语义系统也可以分成几个不同层级的语义单位。 其中最基本的语义单位是义项,义项是语言符号的 意义。义项的构成成分是义素。义项与义项组合成 义丛,义项和义丛又是构成句义的语义成分。语义 的系统性主要表现在义项的聚合关系和句义的组合 规则两方面。
语言学整理资料

第一章:语言与语言学A语言的特性:一、任意性与规约性1. 任意性:语言符号的形式与所表示的意义没有天然的联系。
2. 规约性:语言的形式和意义是约定俗称的关系。
二、二层性:指拥有两层结构这种特性,上层结构的单位由底层结构的元素构成,每层都有自身的组合规则。
(有限手段无限使用,人类交际最显著特征)三、创造性:指语言的能产性,这来源于语言的二层性和递归性。
四、移位性:指人类语言可以让使用者在交际时用语言符号代表时间上和空间上并不可及的物体、时间和观点(好处:使得我们有可能用抽象的概念来交流或思考)B与动物语言区别:由于喉部结构的差异,不适合吐字发音。
但可使用手势语言C语言的功能:信息功能人际功能施为功能感情功能寒暄交谈娱乐功能元语言功能D语言学的发展脉络:一、传统语言学:1.从哲学角度思考(名实之争):区分主语、谓、宾等逻辑成分概念、对语言起源问题的讨论2. 语文学习角度研究(梵文):为阅读理解古代经典文献服务的3. 历史比较角度(主要比较印欧语系):试图通过语言亲属关系的比较研究语言的发展规律,拟测它们共同母语(提供了科学的方法)二、现代语言学(20c,结构语言学)语言是一个符号系统,提出语言的线条性、任意性、“能指”(符号可感知)与“所指”(符号所代表的内容)、“组合关系”(两个同一性质的结构单位按照线性顺序组合的关系)与“聚合关系”(某一位置能够互相替代)(区分历时)更强调共时研究,重视排除历史干扰而对语言现状进行现实的描写区分“内部语言学”和“外部语言学”,认为语言学首先要进行语言系统和系统内部各个要素的研究。
E当代语言学三个主要流派的基本思想:生成语言学派:语言是人类内在化的能力,人类语言虽然差别很大但遵循的原则相同。
强调语法的天赋性、自主性,着重探索人类语言的机制、共性,同时探究各个语言的参数差异,即在探索人类语言共性的基础上探究各个语言的特点。
天赋假设:语言是天赋,儿童生下了就有普遍语法,婴儿言语获得过程是先天的“语言习得机制”。
伍铁平 普通语言学概要第三版 第一章语言与语言学

动物之间也是可以交际的,但这种交 际只限于表达一些低级的情感,如高兴、 威吓、屈从等等。动物不会抽象思维,当 然也就不需要也不可能使用语言。
即使从人的语言和动物的“语言”的 特征来看,两者之间也是有本质的差别的:
1.功能开放。动物的“语言”则分不出 单位的明确界限,传递的信息固定有限。人 类语言是开放系统,能够传递的信息无限丰 富。语言可通过替换和组合构成无限多的句 子。而动物的“语言”只是一种封闭的系统, 它所传递的信息是固定的,是受到动物本身 所受刺激的限定的。人的语言甚至不仅可以 有表面意义,还有“言外之意”。
二、动物“语言”和人类的语言 语言是其他动物和人类之间无法逾越的 鸿沟。 语言的起源,有许多说法。 1.“神授说”。 《圣经》中记载,上帝把各种走兽和空 中的飞鸟带到亚当面前,亚当口里叫出来的 声音就是这种动物的名字。这种说法当然不 会被今天所认可,但它也说明,人类很早就 认识到,语言是人类所独有的。
(2)词类:巴尼尼把词分为名词、动词、介 词、和小品词4类。
(3)语音:古印度语言学家细致地描写了梵 语语音的发音动作,根据生理原则和物理原则 对语音作了分类,区分出元音和辅音,塞音和 擦音,半元音,长音和短音以及音节等。
2.古希腊传统
“古希腊人有一种善于对旁人认为当然的事 加以怀疑的才能。”(布龙菲尔德)他们常常把 对语言的讨论和对哲学的研究夹在一起进行。 词与物的关系是古希腊哲学家研究的主要问 题之一。有的主张“按性质”,即语言是出于天 然的,是合乎逻辑的;有的主张“按规定”,即 语言是由人们规定的,它的结构有很多是不合逻 辑的。
(二)历史比较语言学
历史比较语言学 :对不同语言或同一语言的 不同发展阶段作比较分析,构拟语言的原始基础形 式,确定语言间的亲源关系,以展现语言的发展变 化规律,这样的语言研究叫作历史比较语言学 。
第一章语言与语言学

第一章语言和语言学第一节语言一语言与言语(一)语言的概念语言是一种特殊的社会现象,是人类用于交际和思维的最重要的工具,是音义结合的符号系统。
(二)语言和言语的关系广义的语言包括语言系统、言语活动和言语作品。
狭义的语言只指语言系统,而言语那么包括言语活动和言语作品。
语言是存在于全社团成员大脑里的相对完整的抽象符号系统;言语是个人在特定语境中对语言的具体运用。
语言与言语既有一系列区别,又有紧密联系。
要紧区别在于:1.语言是抽象的,言语是具体的。
2.语言是社会的,言语是个人的。
3.语言是现成的,言语是临时的。
4.语言是有限的,言语是无穷的。
5.语言是稳固的,言语是多变的。
6.语言是后时的,言语是先时的。
语言与言语又有紧密联系,二者相互依存:一方面,语言来自言语,依存于言语,没有言语,就没有语言。
另一方面,语言又制约着言语,指导人们的言语实践。
语言系统一旦形成,又是人们进行言语交际的依据。
二语言的性质(一)语言的符号性用甲事物代表乙事物,而甲乙两事物之间没有必然的联系,甲事物确实是代表乙事物的符号。
其中甲事物确实是符号的能指(形式),乙事物确实是符号的所指(内容、意义)。
语言符号具有多方面的特点,要紧特点有以下几点:1语言符号的任意性2语言符号的稳固性3语言符号的渐变性4语言符号的线条性语言符号的线条性,或称线性,是指说话时语言符号在时刻上依次显现,像一根线条一样。
(二).语言的系统性所谓系统,是指由假设干相互联系的元素组成的整体。
所谓系统性,确实是指系统元素之间的联系性。
(三).语言的社会性社会性是语言的本质属性:第一,从音义结合的关系看,语言具有社会性。
语言符号中的音义结合是任意性的,是由社会“约定俗成”的。
第二,从语言与社会的彼此依存关系看,语言具有社会性,语言是随社会进展而进展,并随社会消亡而消亡。
语言是社会交际的工具,社会不能没有语言。
(四)语言的民族性(五)语言的生成性三语言的功能(一)语言的社会功能语言的社会功能要紧有交际功能和标志功能。
语言学概论

第一章语言和语言学第一节语言存在的客观形式1.1 什么是语言“语言”不是一种物质实体。
语言存在的客观形式首先表现在人类社会中人与人之间的口头交际行为。
“说话”或者说人与人之间“口头交际行为”,从表面上来看,只是两个人或几个人之间互相交替着“说”和“听”的过程,实际上却是一个非常复杂的过程。
1.2口语和书面语任何一种语言总是先有口语,后有书面语,而且大多数语言在其存在的历史上只有口语而没有相应的书面语。
书面语既不是口语绝对忠实的记录,也不是口语机械的复制品。
书面语和口语在大多数情况下一般是基本一致的。
如果书面语跟口语严重脱节,那么或迟或早最终还是要适应口语的演变而发生变化。
但是应该看到书面语的产生具有重大的社会历史意义。
研究语言首先应该研究口语,并且当口语和书面语在某些方面问题上出现严重分歧的时候一般以口语为主。
但是决不能由于重视书面语的研究而忽视口语的研究,更不能认为书面语是语言研究的唯一对象或主要对象。
1.3语言和民族在绝大多数情况下一个名族使用同一种语言多数人会认为“民族”是一个历史形成的,“具有共同的历史文化传统和民族认同感的社会群体”。
所谓“民族国家”是指这些新兴国家大多数基本上是“一个民族,一种语言,一个国家”的现象,这些国家大多数是以单一民族、单一语言为基础建立起来的,如法国、西班牙、葡萄牙、英格兰、德国等等。
他们区分“语言”和“方言”的标准就是所谓“相互理解程度”【错误】:互相能理解的是同一种语言的不同的方言,互相不能理解的是不同的语言。
实际上只能按照“共同的历史文化传统和民族认同感”再参考社会政治因素来处理。
1.4语言和种族绝大多数人早已认识到语言和种族没有必然联系,因为全世界从生理的角度上能确定的种族为数不多,如蒙古人种,欧罗巴人种,闪米特-哈密特人种,尼格罗人种等有限的几种,但是语言而言,即使只算“语系”而不算下属的具体“语言”至少也有一二十种语系。
1、5语言的客观存在形式和语言研究语言客观存在形式首先表现为有声的口头语言即口语,而当出现文字以后,又表现为有形的书面语言即书面语。
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第一章、语言与语言学1. Which “language” is language?Each of the following sentences contains the word language. Read the sentences and identify whether the word, as used in the context, refers to language as activity or language as system. If it refers to language as system, does it refer to a system used by individual, a group of people, or all human beings?1) Compared with English, German is a difficult language.2) The professor keeps using obscure language.3) Aphasia means the loss of ability to use or to understand language.4) Do you know what that word really means? You should be more careful with your language.5) Psychologists use lots of big terms. Their language is difficult to understand.6) The article is full of archaic language.7) Your children are good at picking up a language.8) The boy was scolded by his mother for using bad language.2. Try to detect the fine differences of specific function of language in the following situation.1) Do you have a knife? 2) Ah, here you are.3) Close your book. 4) Road closed!5) What’s your idea? 6) Good heavens!7) If winter comes, can spring be far behind? 8) Long long ago, there was…3. A wolf is able to express subtle graduations of emotion by different positions of the ears, the lips, and the tail. There are eleven postures of the tail that express such emotion as self-confidence, confident threat, lack of tension, uncertain threat, depression, defensiveness, active submission, and complete submission. This system seems to be complex. Suppose there were a thousand different emotions that the wolf could express in this way. Would you then say a wolf had a language similar to man’s? If not, why not?第二章、语音学与音系学1. The principal means of such modification is the tongue; in fact, the word language derives from the Latin word lingua meaning “tongue”. Along with the tongue, our lips and teeth also make the wind from the lungs into speech sounds.2. Practice the pronunciation of the following phrases and point out all the instances of elision that you can find.Sandwich cupboard blackboard handsome waistcoat workshop wildcat shock-wave next stop a great deal a bad boy not tall a good job used to blood test big noise3. Hold your fingers lightly to your throats as you make a long, continuous [z] sound, as in[b zzzzzzz]. Do you feel the vibration? Move your fingers around until you do. That buzzing you feel is the process of voicing. Now try a long [s] sound as in [hissssssss]. You should notice that there is no buzzing. Keep your fingers in place in order to help you answer the following questions:1) Of the four words below, which begin with a voiced sound and which with a voiceless one?tin, bin, din, pin2) How about these four?fire, this, man, think3) Now try voiced sound and voiceless sounds at the end of a word. Which of the following have voicing?this, his, boss, lies4. The plural marker –s is pronounced /s/ sometimes but /z/ other times because of voice assimilation. Put the following nouns into two groups, one for those whose plural form will end in /s/ and the other in /z/:rock pencil plate cat tree knob dip dish workerWhat rules can you derive?5. Some students experience difficulty in learning to spell adjectives in –able or –ible. Given the following lists of words, what rule can you derive concerning the phonological functions of the –able or –ible spellings?applicable navigable invincible eligible despicable indefatigable forcible intangible(Hint:the letter c can be realized either as /k/ or as /s/. When it is followed by a suffix the spelling of the suffix may vary with such phonological realization.)Complete each of the following words by adding –able or –ible.defens- depress- admir- prov- produc- inflex- ostens- pay- divis- frang- plaus- wash- dispos- enclose- touch- mut- revis- patch- ador- read- bear- brib- chew- see-6. In terms of intonation, English is categorized as a stress-timed language. This means that in normal, uninterrupted speech, accented syllables occur at more or less regular intervals of time. In other words, the length of time between stressed syllables is similar however many other (relatively less accented) syllables occur in between. In contrast, Chinese is syllable-timed language, in which the timing of all syllables tends to be equal, regardless of their stress.7. In English, intonation may express either grammatical or attitudinal meaning. For one thing, it may modify the function of a sentence. Y ou said you put the sugar in the fridge is grammatically a declarative. But if the word fridge is pronounced with a falling tone instead of the rising-falling tone used in the statement, the sentence will function as the question:it has the same meaning as the interrogative Did you say you put the sugar in the fridge?Another grammatical function of intonation is to clarify the meaning of a grammatically ambiguous sentence. The following sentence may mean different depending on what intonation is used.︳︳∧She ︳didn’t marry him because she ︳loved him.︳︳(She did marry him, but did not love him. She might have married him for his money or because of family pressure.)︳︳∧She ︳didn’t ︳marry him ︳︳∧because she ︳loved him.︳︳(She loved him, but did not marry him. Perhaps she thought that she was not good enough for him or she had some other reason for which hit was better for him if they did not marry.) Besides these grammatical functions, intonation can also express attitudinal meaning. That is, it can serve to express the attitudes or emotions of the speaker towards the subject matter, the hearer and/or her or himself. By selecting the place of the tonic, the type of pitch movement andthe overall contour of the sentence, the speaker can communicate emphasis, doubt, surprise, determination, shock, sarcasm, incredulity and so on.8. Phonetics is the scientific study os speech sounds. It studies how speech sounds are articulated, transmitted, and received. It is a pure science and examines speech sounds in general; Phonology is the study of how speech sounds function in a language. It studies the way speech sounds are organized. It can be seen as the functional phonetics of a particular language. With some phonetic knowledge we can give a much more precise description to speech sounds; and with some phonological knowledge we can become more aware of the functions of sounds in different languages.The study of the speech sounds that occur in human languages is called phonetics. Human beings are capable of producing a wide range of sounds, but only a small set is used for speech. The task of phonetics is to identify what are speech sounds in a language, and then to study their characteristics. Phonology is the description of the systems and patterns of speech sounds in a language. It is, in fact, based on a theory of what every speaker of a language unconsciously knows about the sound patterns of that language.1. Take a careful observation on the elementary students’ or ten-year-old children’s memorization of complex English words like the following, trying to get the differences with college English major’s mode of memorizing them.sharpeners, legitimate, respectively, transcription, other-worldly, antidisestablishmentariansim 2. Which of the following forms are possible words of English?Mbood, coofp, sproke, worpz, frall, ktleem, fluke, bsarn3. With your acquired knowledge of vocabulary, please categorize the following eight morphemes into derivational and inflectional (there are four of each) and give an example of how each can be used.-ed (past) –ing –ate -ify -ize -ious –s (plural) –s (3rd person singular) Then with a partner, try to come up with as many more inflectional and derivational morphemes as you can, again give an example of how each is used. Which do there seem to be more of in English, inflectional morphemes or derivational ones?4. For those of us who’ve learned English through study, the word cupboard can be divided into cup and board, each a free morpheme. We may have been realized this when we first learned this word. For most native speakers, however, cupboard is a single morpheme; they have never thought about the idea that it comes from the notion of a board that can be used to store cups. This is reflected in the way the word is pronounced (a blending that does not retain the /p/ at the end of cup or original vowel sound of board).5. Morphemes do make up a word, but the meanings created by combinations of morphemes are not always predictable. Consider the following story:Bill was trying to tell his friends that his wife was physically unable to conceive and give birth to a child. He said:“The doctor said that she is impregnable.” But immediately she realized that the word “impregnable”means invulnerable or stubborn. “Oh,”he said, “I mean she is inconceivable…no…unbearable.”Children often notice the way in which morphemes have “illogical”meanings. One child named Katty asked her mother, “mommy, if a vegetarian is someone who eats vegetables, what does that make a humanitarian?”1. Place an asterisk next to any of these sentences that sound ungrammatical to you. Try an explanation what makes these sentences ungrammatical.1) The tutor told the students to study.2) The tutor suggested the students to study.3) The customer asked for a cold beer.4) The customer requested for a cold beer.5) He gave the Red Cross some money.6) He denoted the Red Cross some money.7) The pilot landed the jet.8) The jet landed.9) A journalist wrote the article.10) The article wrote very well.11) Julie is tired of her job.12) Julie is bored of her job.13) Myself bit John.14) I was surprised fro you to get married.15) Has the nurse slept the baby yet?2. Sentences below go against some rules of correct English. Do you know what they are?1) That’s the girl I gave my roller skates to.2) He wanted to simply borrow your car for an hour.3. Paraphrase each of the following sentences in two different ways.Example:Smoking grass can be nauseating.a. Putting grass in a pipe and smoking it can make you sick.b. Fumes from smoldering grass can make you sick.1) Terry loves his wife and so do I.2) They said she would go yesterday.3) The governor is a dirty street fighter.4) The design has big structures and circles.4. Try to detect the problems of the following sentences1) A student was upset when his classmates laughed at a sentence he had written:I passed by the hospital where my father died every day except the weekend.Why did his classmates laugh? How can you help him express his meaning more clearly? 2) A pharmacy put up a sign that read,We dispense with accuracy.What does this sign attract attention? How do you interpret it?(Hint:What is the verbal group here, dispense or dispense with?)3) Imagine that a hotel guest says, “Call me a taxi.” And the doorman says, “OK, you’re a taxi.”What can you tell about the relationship between these two people?4) What is the difference in structure between “She made him a cake.” And “She made him a student.”? The grammatical form of the two sentences looks the same, but is it?5) Consider the following sign:Wanted:A man to wash dishes and the two young waitresses.What unusual duties does this job for a man seem to include?5. Combine the following sentences:Aluminum is a metal. It is abundant. It has many uses.It comes from bauxite. Bauxite is an ore. Bauxite looks like clay.6. We can change “A guest turned down the radio.” into “The radio was turned down by a guest.”because it contains a transitive phrasal verb. However, can we do the same in the following sentence?A canoe floated down the river.Referent answer:5. These are in fact six single-clause sentences, each is with its X-word.1) A fourth-grade child combined the sentences in the following way:Aluminum is a metal and is abundant. It has many uses and it comes from bauxite. Bauxite is an ore and bauxite looks like clay.In this answer, the six sentences have been reduced to three, but there are still six X-words.2) An eighth-grade child produced the following version:Aluminum is an abundant metal, has many uses and comes from bauxite which is an ore that looks like clay.In this version, all of the ideas have been combined into a single sentence, but there are still five X-words, only one less than in the original.3) A student in the 12th-grade was able to do the job with only three X-words:Aluminum is an abundant metal with many uses. It comes from an ore called bauxite that looks like clay.4) And finally an educated adult who was an experienced writer managed to combine all of the ideas into a single complex sentence which had only one X-word.Aluminum, an abundant metal of many uses, comes from bauxite, a clay-like ore.6. No, we cannot. The reason this sentence cannot be made passive is that down is not part of its verbal group. Instead, down is acting as a true preposition; it is the head of a prepositional phrase, with the river as its object.第五章语义学1. To some Chinese students, a farmer is a peasant, and a peasant is a farmer. Look up these two words in a monolingual English dictionary and discuss the differences you find there.2. Have you ever heard the song “Love is blue”? It sounds romantic, but exactly what does blue mean? Chinese and English shares such color terns as red, blue, yellow, green, purple, orange, black, and white, but the connotations are not the same. Make a list of what each of them implies in Chinese; for instance, red may imply jealously or imply being politically active. Then, look up each of them in your dictionary and, in separate column, write down what each of them implies in English.Then answer the following questions. How do you translate 红眼病into English? What does red eyed mean? What do people mean when they say blue movie?3. In high school we learned that the word way means “road” or “method”. But the truth about this word is not actually that simple. Only by seeing it in multiple contexts can we come to see what way really “means”. With a partner, discuss the different meanings of the apparently simple word in each of the following sentences.Do you know your way to school?I’m on my way to lunch.Do it the right way.The chair is in my way.You’re heading the wrong way.That’s the way I like it.No way.4. There are certain Chinese English expressions we should definitely not use. For instance,I played with my friends over the weekend.I’m happy you look so fat and healthy.Now, we are intimate friends.Look up play, fat, and intimate in the dictionary and discuss why the phrases above are not generally appropriate in English.5. Explain the semantic ambiguity of the following sentences by providing two or more sentencesthat paraphrase the multiple meanings. Example:She can’t bear children can mean She can’t give birth to children or She can’t tolerate children.1) He waited by the bank.2) Is he really that kind?3) We bought her dog biscuits.4) He saw that gasoline can explore.5) Fifty soldiers shot three wild foxes.6) He saw her drawing pencils.6. Even advanced learners are sometimes unable to appreciate the shades of meaning involved in the use of X-words to express modality. With a partner, discuss the differences of meaning between the following sets of sentences.1) a) May I use your phone? a) Can I use your phone? c) Could I use your phone?2) a) You shouldn’t have to talk to him. b) You must not talk to him.3) a) I should go. b) I have to go. c) I’m supposed to go.c) I would rather go. e) I had better go7. Denotation and connotationA rough idea of differences of the two words can be summarized that denotation is a word’s primary, literal meaning and connotation refers to the more subtle flavor of associations that a word calls up.The denotation of a word, also known as a word’s “designative meaning” or “lexical meaning”, is whatever this word stands for outside itself, be that an object, a concept, or a state of affairs For instance, the word porch conjures up in the mind a picture of some kind of structure that is attached to the outside wall of a house, with a door opening to the inside and usually with a roof and enough room for some people to sit. This metal picture is the denotation of porch.What a word communicates to us includes all of the associations that have built up through our previous experience of what that word denotes in the real life. This part of meaning is called connotation or associative meaning. The connotation of a word is built out of the types of feelings that the word brings up, such as the attitude of language user and his or her emotional reaction to what the word stands for. Words of similar denotation may have very different connotations. For example, the words resolute, stubborn and pigheaded all have essentially the same denotation,referring to someone who sticks firmly to an idea and is unwilling to change his opinion. Resolute, however, has very positive connotations, implying that the person is brave and has integrity. S tubborn, on the other hand, is slightly negative, implying that someone is strong of character, but perhaps not adequately sensitive to the ideas or needs of others. And pigheaded, is simply an insult, comparing someone to a very undesirable animal (the connotation of the word pig include very dirty, fat, and greedy).8. Componential analysis is a method that looks at each word as a bundle of different features or components. The focus of componential analysis is on finding those features that are necessary and sufficient for a given item to be an example of a given words. For example, the word man could be seen as the sum of the features [+human], [+adult], [+male]. Anyone who has all of these features qualifies as a man.Componential analysis can be particularly useful in helping to understand the subtle differences in meaning between a group of related words. It can be particularly benefit when you are required to translate to or from English. The word heir in English, for instance, means a person who has received, or will receive, something of value after someone else died or dies. But in many other cultures, the use of the term clearly implies that the other person has died already (What about in Chinese?). Another strength of this method lies in its handling of figurative language. Figures of speech tend to be highly culture-bound. If an English speaker says the phrase “He is the dog”, they are probably commenting on the person’s greed or selfishness, as this is the feature associated with dogs. But if the same comparison is made in Chinese, the speaker probably means to call the person a snob or bootlicker since dogs are seen as submissive and servile.In spite of the strengths, componential analysis is not completely satisfactory for the analysis of meaning in all situations. The following are its three major limitations:1) It tends to focus exclusively on denotation and leave out the connotation. For example, shou t usually implies a degree of urgency, growl carries with it a sense of anger and disapproval, whisper one of secrecy; and babble is associated with babies. None of these important shades of meaning are captured by the componential analysis.2) Componential analysis focuses exclusively on typical cases. The word run, when distinguished from walk, jump and hop, may be defined as moving quickly on two feet, with no foot on the ground for an instant for each step. The analysis, however, leaves out the meaning ofrun as it is used in sentences such asThe crabs are running around. The snake ran across the lawn.Then, the cases are also detected in which there is no physical movement:He runs the office. He is running for president.The car is running. The road runs across the mountain.3) It is often difficult, if not impossible, to define exactly what the necessary and sufficient features for a given word are. In man y cases, people seem to know how words differ from each other without being able to definitely identify their components. For example, what are the defining features of more abstract words such as freedom, democracy, socialism and communism? Also an attempt to classify different plants will quickly fall into highly technical biological terminology.9. Predicational AnalysisPredicational analysis is based on grammatical meaning. That is, it looks at the syntagmatic axis and seeks to uncover the aspects of meaning that words get from their syntactic relationships with the words they are used alongside.For example, inThe cat was chasing the mouse.The word cat, in addition to the lexical meaning of the word “cat”, takes on the meaningful role of “doer” or “agent” because of its relationship to the verb chase. In other words, “cat” is the one who carries out the action of “chasing”. However, inThe dog was chasing the cat.The word cat, while retaining the same lexical meaning, now has a different grammatical meaning. Here, it is the “bearer” or “patient” because it receives (i.e., “bears”) the action of being chased. In other words, “cat” is the one to or against whom the action is directed. In both cases, we would classify chase as a two-place argument; that is, as a verb whose use must involve an agent and a patient.A clause is usually a predicational process. There are three major types of process:action processes, mental processes, and relational processes.1) Action processesAn action process may comprise the following elements:ACTION, DOER, BEARER,BENEFICIARY, RANGE, TIME/PLACE, INSTRUMENT/MEANS/MANNER.Each of these is a grammatical meaning that a word takes on when it is used in a sentence. For instance,Joe opened the door with another key five minutes ago.She ran the race superbly.George built his mother a house near the village.Jack bought a book.In analyzing these sentences, we have:Action:open, run, build, buy;Doer:Joe, the person she refers to, George, Jack;Bearer:door, house, bookInstrument/means/manner:key, superbly;Beneficiary:George’s mother, Mary;Range:race;Time/place:five minutes ago, near the village.2) Mental processesA mental process may comprise the following elements:EXPRIENCE, EXPRIENCER, PHENOMENON, TIME/PLACE.For instance,Sally saw the dawn.He also heard the barking.Jack likes that sculpture.The movie amused her.Jerry understands the question and knows the answer.In analyzing these sentences, we have:Experience:see, hear, like, amuse, understand, know;Experiencer:Sally, the person he refers to, Jack, the person her refers to, Jerry,;Phenomenon:dawn, barking, sculpture, movie, question, answer3) Relational processes.A relation process may comprise an ITEM and an ATTRIBUTE, often connected with thehelp of a RELATOR, usually verb “to be”. For instance,The movie is interesting.Joe is a soloist.The artist is George.The brother will be in London.Mary has three kids.Here, whatever precedes “to be” or “to have” is the ITEM, and whatever following it is the ATTRIBUTE.In English, a predicational process is usually a two-place predication. That is, it requires either a DOER and a BEARER, and EXPRIENCER and a PHONOMENON, or an ITEM and an ATTRIBUTE. It may be three-place predication is the action word is, for instance, give or put. Such asThe door opened. A boy walked in.English also has a few zero-place predications:It is raining. Here is the man.There are many people.A predicational process does not have to be realized in a sentence or clause. It can also occur within a nominal group. The following nominal groups can be seen as sharing the same predication:The fact that a man was wearing a wigA man who is wearing a wigA man wearing a wigA man with a wig onA bewigged man10. Linguistic Relativity /The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.The semantic structure of a given language --- the way in which it organizes and classifies reality---has a strong effect on how people who speak that language experience the world. That is, the language we speak determines how we see things. This idea is called the linguistic relativity or, because of the two scholars who argued strongly for it early in the 20th century, the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.Referent answer:6. 1) All three sentences express polite requests, but sentence (a) and (b) are formal (with (a) being perhaps a bit more formal that (a)) while sentence c is informal. In an office where you do not know anyone well, sentence (a) or (b) would be appropriate. Among friends, only (c) would be appropriate; the others would put your friends at too much of a distance.2) While have to and must express almost exactly the same meaning in the positive, their negative meanings are quite different. Sentence a) expresses freedom from obligation; the person being addressed may choose whether to talk him or not.3) These sentences express a range of attitudes towards the idea of leaving.a) This means that there is some reason to go, but this reason is perhaps not very strong. In fact, the speaker may well stay.b) Some other party expects the speaker to go.c) This implies that there will be some negative consequences if the speaker does not go (had better always implies that there is some negative consequence, and it is often used with the phrase or else --- which introduces whatever will occur if the action is not done).d) The speaker is saying that he is required to go. In this situation, the meaning of have to is identical to must.e) The speaker is saying that she wants to go and she would prefer leaving to staying.第六章语用学1. The following exchanges all take place between an American teacher in her early fifties (A) anda Chinese college student (B). In each case, B uses English in a way that may confuse or even anger A. Edit these dialogues so that B expresses the intended meaning in a more appropriate way.1) B has just introduced himself to A after the first class of the fall semester.A:Your English is excellent.B:No, no. My English is very poor. I still have a long way to go.2) A has been ill, but now is released from the hospital.A:I’m glad to be able to go home.B:I’m glad, too. You look so healthy, and you have put on a lot of weight.3) A is having a dinner in B’s home.A:That was a lovely dinner. But now I’m full.B:oh, don’t be so polite. There’s indeed little food, but you should eat more. Eat more. 4) A is about to get on her bicycle. .A:See, I can ride my bike as well as a Chinese..B:Be careful. An old woman like you should not take any risks.5) A and B are riding on a bus.A:Hey, B, there’s a seat for you.B:Oh, no. you’d better take it because you are old.6) A and B are complaining about Karaoke.A:I can’t stand karaoke.B:Yes, I can’t too. I don’t know why so many people like it.7) B is sitting in A’s apartment when A wants to go out for a while.A:do you mind if I leave you alone for a few minutes?B:Yes, of course.2. Someone stands between you and the TV set you were watching, so you decide to say one of the following. Identify the delicate distinction of these expressions (direct or indirect?).1) Move!2) You’re in my way.3) Could you sit down?4) I can’t see anything.5) Please get out of the way.3. What exactly are the aspects of the context that have the influence on language use?Linguists have identified three key aspects of context,1) Field. It refers to the topic being discussed. It can be thought of as the “what” of a piece of discourse.2) Tenor. It relates to “who” or the interpersonal relationship between the two or more people involved in a discourse.3) Mode. It refers to the type of medium that the discourse is being communicated through. These include speaking in person, speaking over the phone, writing and so on.For example, Dick Jameson calls to invite you for a job interview. The field is an invitation for a job interview. The tenor is somewhat formal, between two people who do not know each other but may be starting a business relationship. The mode is talk by phone.。