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Language & Communication Nepali students talk with Forest Foragers - Raute women
Language and Communication • What Is Language • Nonhuman Communication • Nonverbal Communication • The Structure of Language • Language, Thought, and Culture • Sociolinguistics • Historical Linguistics
What Is Language? • Primary means of communication (spoken or written) • Transmitted through learning as part of enculturation • Based on symbols - arbitrary, learned associations between words and the things they represent
What Is Language? • Allows humans to: • Conjure up elaborate images • Discuss the past and future • Share experiences with others • Benefit from their experiences • Anthropologists study language in its social and cultural context
Nonhuman Primate Communication • Automatic and cannot be combined • At some point in human development, ancestors began to combine calls and to understand the combinations • Call Systems – limited number of sounds that are produced in response to specific stimuli
Nonhuman > Human Communication • Call Systems • Number of calls expanded, eventually becoming too great to be transmitted even partly through genes • Communication came to rely almost totally on learning Traditional singer (Gaine) at center discusses his performance. Photo: J. Fortier
Animal Communication & Sign Language • More recent experiments show that apes can learn to use, if not speak, true language Washoe, a chimpanzee, eventually acquired vocabulary of over 100 ASL signs
Animal Communication • Lucy, another chimpanzee, lived in a foster family and used ASL to converse with foster parents • Washoe and Lucy exhibited several human traits • Koko, a gorilla, regularly uses 400 ASL signs and has used 700 at least once. Dr. Roger Fouts teaching Lucy ASL; Photo: Time Mag.
Hominoid: Pongids: Orangutans Chantek, an orangutan, has learned more than 150 ASL words
Nonhuman Communication • Koko and the chimps show that apes share linguistic ability with humans • Cultural transmission of a communication system through learning is a fundamental attribute of language • Productivity – combined two or more signs to create new expressions • Displacement – ability to talk about things that are not present
Nonhuman Communication • Experiments with ASL demonstrate that chimps and gorillas have rudimentary capacity for language There are no known instances where chimps or gorillas in the wild have developed a comparable system of signs on their own
The Origin of Language • Language developed over 150,000y.a.+ from human ancestral call systems Language is effective for learning; enables humans to adapt rapidly to new stimuli Tower of Babel; courtesy Gustave Doré's Illustrated Bible
The Structure of Language • Scientific study of spoken language involves several levels of organization • Phonology – study of speech sounds • Morphology – study of meaningful speech sounds (sound segments combining to form words) • Lexicon – dictionary containing all its morphemes, words, and meanings • Syntax – arrangement and order of words in phrases and sentences
The Structure of Language • Speech Sounds • Phoneme – sound contrast that makes a difference, that differentiates meaning • Phonetics – study of human speech sounds • IPA - International Phonetic Alphabet • Phonemics – studies only the significant sound contrasts of given language
KhoeKhoegowab Lesson No:1 The Khoekhoe language at ww.youtube.com/watch?v=Nz44WiTVJww
International Phonetic Alphabet • The Nama people’s Khoekhoe implosive sounds • / - dental • ! - Palatal • # - alveolar • // - lateral Khoisan language speakers
Language, Thought, and Culture • Noam Chomsky argues human brain contains limited set of rules for organizing language, so all languages have common structural basis
The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis – • Grammatical categories of different languages lead their speakers to think about things in particular ways Irvin Poleahla (Hopi) films at Mesa Verde National Park, Colo.
Hopi Verb Tenses • Hopi has 2 main verb tenses • Realis - present & past; things that are real • Irrealis - future & conditional - things not accomplished
Language, Thought, and Culture • Focal Vocabulary • Specialized sets of terms and distinctions that are particularly important to certain groups • Vocabulary is area of language that changes most rapidly • Language, culture, and thought are interrelated • Types of olives, terms used in a sport, etc.
Language, Thought, and Culture • Semantics = Meaning Ethnosemantics – study of how speakers of particular languages use sets of terms to organize, or categorize, their experiences and perceptions The ways people divide up the world – the contrasts they perceive as meaningful or significant – reflect their experiences e.g. Rice (Eng.) : Arroz (Span.) : chamal, bhat (‘uncooked rice’ ‘cooked rice’ Nep.; also aluwa 'freshly husked rice')
Sociolinguistics • Investigates relationships between social and linguistic variation, or language in its social context Sociolinguists focus on features that vary systematically with social position and situation Scene from film “Himalaya”
Diversity & Sociolinguistics • StyleShifts – varying speech in different contexts • Diglossia – regular style shifts between “high” and “low” variants of the same language • We rank certain speech patterns as better or worse because we recognize they are used by groups that we also rank • Politicians speak w/ Southern drawl in the South/Northern accent in the North
Gender Speech Contrasts Men and women have differences in phonology, grammar, and vocabulary, as well as in the body stances and movements that accompany speech *swear words *tag questions *tonal shifts *In non-English langs, sometimes diff vocab & grammar
Gender & Language • Deborah Tannen found women esp. use language and body movements to build rapport, social connections with others; men deliver more reported speech Photo; Www.canuuwomenhistory.ca
Language and Status Position • Honorifics – terms used with people to “honor” them Americans tend to be less formal than other nationalities, although they include honorifics British have a more developed set of honorifics Japanese language has several honorifics Kin terms can be associated with gradations in rank and familiarity
Stratification • Use and evaluate speech in context of extralinguistic forces – social, political, and economic • Our speech habits help determine our access to employment and other material resources
Sociolinguistics • Pierre Bourdieu views linguistic practices as symbolic capital that properly trained people may convert into economic and social capital • Linguistic forms take on the power of the groups they symbolize • Linguistic insecurity often felt by lower-class and minority speakers result of symbolic domination
Pronunciation of ‘r’ in NYC Stores Researcher Q: “Excuse me, where are the women's shoes?” from The social stratification of English in New York City By William Labov
When Languages Collide • Pidgin - speaking the dominant colonizer’s language • Creole - regular grammatical rules that combine 2 languages Tok Pigin spoken in New Guinea
French Creoles • Louisiana Creole is a combination of French,West African,and the Spanish language • Creoles combine grammar of subordinate language with words of dominant language Herb Metoyer. www.herbmetoyer.com
English Creoles: Gullah, Sea Island Creole from South Carolina Island Region • Gullah is a creole form of English, indigenous to the Sea Islands of South Carolina and Georgia Annie Scott weaves a sweetgrass basket Saturday afternoon at the Gullah Flea Market on Hilton Head Island. Photo: J. Dyer
When languages collide... • Codeswitching - speaking with regularized rules using 2 languages • Dialect - a noticeably different way of speaking a language; mutually intelligible with the standard dialect
Black English Vernacular (B.E.V.) • Linguists view B.E.V. as a dialect of English rather than a separate language William Labov writes B.E.V. is “relatively uniform dialect spoken by the majority of black youth in most parts of the U.S. today . . . ”
Black English Vernacular (B.E.V.) • B.E.V. speakers less likely to pronounce r than Standard English (SE) speakers • B.E.V. speakers use copula deletion to eliminate the verb to be from their speech • th --> d- • Omit possessives “That’s the child’s doll --> “Dat da child’ doll” • Use more contractions: Doesn’t --> Don’t “It doesn’t matter --> It don’t matter” • Standard English not superior in terms of ability to communicate ideas, but it is the prestige dialect
Historical Linguistics • Long-term variation of speech by studying protolanguages and daughter languages • Historical linguists reconstruct many features of past languages by studying contemporary daughter languages • Written forms vs. reconstruction based on oral languages
Historical Linguistics • Daughter Languages – languages that descend from same parent language and that have been changing separately for hundreds or even thousands of years Protolanguage – original language from which daughter languages descend Subgroups – languages within a taxonomy of related languages that are most closely related
Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales • A Frere ther was, a wantowne and a merye, A lymytour, a ful solempne man. In alle the ordres foure is noon that kan so muche of dalianune and fair language. • A Friar there was, wanton and merry, A limiter [limited to certain districts], a full solemn [very important] man. In all the order four there in none that knows so much of dalliance [flirting] and fair [engaging] language.
PIE Family Tree The Indo-European languages. Traceable to a protolanguage, Proto-Indo-European (PIE), *PIE spoken more than 6,000 years ago. *PIE split into separate languages *Identify relations using cognates
Indo-Eur. Numerals in IPA* IPA=International phonetic alphabet
Ethnologue • www.ethnologue.com