Do Now List as many words as you can think of to describe a body of water (example: ocean)

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Do Now List as many words as you can think of to describe a body of water (example: ocean)

Transcript of Do Now List as many words as you can think of to describe a body of water (example: ocean)

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Do Now

List as many words as you can think of to describe a body of water (example: ocean)

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CommunicationLinguistics and the

Arts

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What do the following words mean?

Whalers Crisps Pop Trousers Sucker Billfold Thermals Kleenex

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Linguistics

The essential function of language is communication

Language is the medium for the transition of culture

Human communication is no limited to spoken language

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Cognition

Not all people process the world in the same way. Cognition is based on both language and culture, as well as biology

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Non-human communication

Systems of communication are not unique to humans

Other animals communicate through sound, odor, and body movement

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The ability of gorillas and chimpanzees to learn sign language suggests symbolic communication is not unique to humans

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Vervet Monkeys

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Human Communication

SymbolicArbitrary in meaningOpen

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Symbolic

Language has meaning even when its referent in not present

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Arbitrary in meaning

There is no “natural” word for a thing. We “make-up” what to call it.

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Do Now:

See handout

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Open

Language is governed by complex rules about how sounds and sequences of sounds can be combined to produce an infinite variety of meanings

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Descriptive Linguistics

Also known as structural linguistics

Seeks to determine the rules of:– Phonology– Morphology– Syntax

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Phones

Phones are soundsPhonology is the study of the rules

that predict how sounds are made and used

Phonemes- a sound or set of sounds that makes a difference in meaning

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Morphs

The smallest unit of language that has meaning is a morph

Morphology is the study of how sound sequences convey meaning

Morphemes- one or more morphs with the same meaning

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Syntax

How words are strung together to form phases or sentences

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Lexicon

A list of a languages morphs and meanings

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Closure

Exit Ticket: Write down 3 things you learned about parts of speech.

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Do NowIf you could learn to speak another language which one would you learn? Why? (3 Sentences)

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Historical Linguistics

Historic linguistics seek to determine the origins and changes in languages over time

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Dialects

Variations on a language spoken in an area by several groups

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Origins of Language

Linguists study the origins of languages by comparing common elements in languages

Cognates-words that have the same meaning in multiple languages

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Protolanguages

Are presumed languages from which other languages originate

Proto-Indo European (about 50% of world languages)

Sino-TibetanBantuNative America Amarid

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Dyen List

A list of Proto Indo-European cognates

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English

English is an Indo-European language

English is a Germanic language

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Nearly 1/3 of English words are French in origin (1066 Norman invasion of England)

During the Renaissance Latin and Greek words are added to English

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Language Divergence

Both isolation and contact lead to the evolution of new languages

The isolation of the German Angles, Saxons, and Jutes on an island =English

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European colonization in the 1400-1700 = the spread of Spanish, English, and French

The spread of Islam = spread of Arabic

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Closure

Do you think the world is becoming more unilingual or multilingual? Why?

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Do Now

What other words can you use that mean the same thing as “kill”? (3 Sentences)

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Writing

Writing developed c.5KYA to keep track of planting cycles

Calendars were the first form of writing

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Writing evolved along the following lines– Ideograms- image = idea– Pictograms- image = what it is a

picture of– Phonograms- image = a sound

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Alphabet

Our alphabet was originally developed by the Phoenicians

The Greeks adopted and modified the Phoenician alphabet

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The Romans adopted and modified the alphabet further

The alphabet was further changed by the Germans after the fall of Rome

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Exit Ticket

Is it right for the military to use other words to describe killing? What effect might this have on our society?

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Do Now

Type 1- 4 Lines- What will a girl or guy do to show they like you?

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Exit Ticket

Why do you think people pick up on non-verbal communication clues so easily?

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Hieroglyphs

An Egyptian phonographic writing system

Rosetta Stone- important archaeological find that allowed for the translation of hieroglyphs

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Khipu

Also spelled quipu, an Incan writing method that uses knots to record information. In some ways it is similar to the binary code of computers

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Language and CultureThe way society views the world

around it can be reflected in its language

More complex societies have larger vocabularies

Core Vocabulary- non-specialist vocabulary

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Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis

Language also influences culture

Studies show societies whose languages have more gender emphasis developed gender concepts earlier

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Ethnography of Speaking

Speech can reveal social statusLower class individuals generally

speak heterogeneously, while high classes speak homogenously (Grammar)

Age, social standing, occupation can all be reflected in speech

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Ethnography of Speaking

Gender differences and biases are often seen in language

Directs vs. Indirect commands (How to Give Orders Like a Man) (Eastern vs. Western Cultures)

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Sociolinguistics

The study of culture and subculture patterns of speaking in different social contexts:

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Codeswitching

Changing languages in the course of a conversation

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Diglosia

A situation where there is more than one language spoken

There is almost always a language hierarchy

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Language Planning

MSA- Modern Standard Arabic

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The Arts

Art, like language, is a cultural universal It is an expressive form of communication It stimulates senses, affects emotions, it

has cultural meaning, it is produced in a culturally patterned way, and some people are thought to be better at it than others

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Body Art

All societies decorate or adorn the body

Examples include:– Scaring– Piercing– Tattoos– Branding

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Visual Art

A cultures’ technology and materials are the two restraining limits on art

Two aspects reveled in a societies art are items of importance and social stratification

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Music

Cultural complexity reveals itself in a cultures’ music

Cross-culture studies suggest links between music style and child rearing, gender stratification, and social stratification

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Folklore

Folklore includes myths, legends, folktales, ballads, riddles, proverbs, and superstations

Cross-culture research suggests aggression in folklore mirrors aggression in society

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Folklore

Folklore reveals cultural norms and rules

Folklore is traditional transmitted orally

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Arabic Art

The Quran forbids images of Allah or Mohamed

As such Islamic art tends to focus less on individuals and more on complex geometric patters.

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Art is always changing

Cultural contact has profound impact on art

Commercialization affects art as well