Senin, 10 Maret 2014

Human diverties 1 ; Language



Language and Communication
This chapter introduces students to the study of linguistics.  It discusses the differences between animal and human communication, the basic categories and definitions used to study language, and the many ways in which language, culture, and social action intersect.

Introduction
t  Language is our primary means of communication.
t  Language is transmitted through learning, as part of enculturation.
t  Language is based on arbitrary, learned associations between words and the things they represent.
t  Only humans have the linguistic capacity to discuss the past and future in addition to the present.
t  Anthropologists study language in its social and cultural context.

Call Systems
t  Call systems consist of a limited number of sounds that are produced in response to specific stimuli (e.g. food or danger)
t  Calls cannot be combined to produce new calls.
t  Calls are reflexive in that they are automatic responses to specific stimuli.
t  Although primates use call systems, their vocal tract is not suitable for speech.



Sign language
t  A few nonhuman primates have been able to learn to use American Sign Language (ASL).
t  Washoe, a chimpanzee, eventually acquired a vocabulary of over 100 ASL signs.
t  Lucy, another chimpanzee, lived in a foster family until she was introduced to the “wild” where she was killed by poachers.
t  Koko, a gorilla, regularly uses 400 ASL signs and has used 700 at least once.
t  These nonhuman primates have displayed some “human-like” capacities with ASL.
t  Joking and lying
t  Cultural transmission: they have tried to teach ASL to other animals
t  Productivity: they have combined two or more signs to create a new expressions
t  Displacement: the ability to talk about things that are not present
t  The experiments with ASL demonstrate that chimps and gorillas have a rudimentary capacity for language.
t  It is important to remember that these animals were taught ASL by humans. 
t  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
t  The human capacity for language developed over hundreds of thousands of years, as call systems were transformed into language.
t  Language is a uniquely effective vehicle for learning that enables humans to adapt more rapidly to new stimuli than other primates.

NonVerbal communication
t  Kinesics is the study of communication through body movements, stances, gestures and facial expressions.
t  Odors also play an important role in nonverbal communication.

The structure Of Language
t  The scientific study of spoken language involves several levels of organization: phonology, morphology, lexicon, and syntax.
t  Phonology is the study of the sounds use in speech.
t  Morphology studies the forms in which sounds are grouped in speech.
t  A language’s lexicon is a dictionary containing all of the smallest units of speech that have a meaning (morpheme).
t  Syntax refers to the rules that order words and phrases into sentences.

Speech Sounds
t  In any given language, phonemes are the smallest sound contrasts that distinguish meaning (they carry no meaning themselves).
t  Phones are the sounds made by humans that might act as phonemes in any given language.
t  Phonetics is the study of human speech sounds, phonemics is the study of phones as they act in a particular language.
t  Phonemics studies only the significant sound contrasts of a given language.



Language, Thought, and Culture
t  Chomsky argues that the universal grammar is finite, and the fact that any language is translatable to any other language is taken to be evidence supporting this claim.
t  The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis: Sapir and Whorf are described as early advocates of the view that different languages imply different ways of thinking (e.g., Palaung vs. English, Hopi speculative tense).

Focal  Vocabulary
t  Lexical elaboration that corresponds to an activity or item that is culturally central is called a focal vocabulary.
t  It is argued that, while language, thought, and culture are interrelated, change is more likely to move from culture to language, rather than the reverse.
t  Focal Vocabulary for Hockey

Meaning :
t  Semantics “refers to a language’s meaning system.”
t  Ethnoscience, or ethnosemantics, is the study of linguistic categorization of difference, such as in classification systems, taxonomies, and specialized terminologies (such as astronomy and medicine).









Refrensi : binusmaya.binus.ac.id

9 komentar:

  1. informasinya lumayan baik. cuman blognya dibikin lebih menarik lagi ya.
    nilainya: 80

    BalasHapus
  2. blog kamu bagus, isinya pun komplit, tapi mungkin tampilan blognya dibagusin sedikit ya

    BalasHapus
    Balasan
    1. iya, makasiih erdy buat koment nya.. nnti aku bagusin lagi deh blognya..

      Hapus
  3. blognya sudah bagus keren pake bahasa inggris pulaaa nilainya 84 deh :)

    BalasHapus
  4. Right,in the present era of human language can explore sound, image and emotion with ease through the gadget,.....#Good article...

    BalasHapus
  5. Tentang bahasa ini menarik nih, ada mengajari tentang ASL. wes apik. 85 nilainya

    BalasHapus