General LinguisticsA comprehensive overview of the development of language studies from the ancient Greeks through modern theorists, this book focuses on determining what the enduring issues in linguistics are, what concepts have changed, and why. Francis P. Dinneen, SJ, defines the basic terminology of the discipline as well as different linguistic theories, and he frequently compares underlying assumptions in contemporaneous science and linguistics. General Linguistics traces the history of linguistics from ancient Greek works on grammar and rhetoric through the medieval roots of traditional grammar and its assumption that there is a norm for correct speech. Dinneen marks the beginning of modern linguistics with Saussure's concept of an autonomous linguistic structure independent of socially imposed norms, and he details the theoretical contributions of Sapir, Bloomfield, Hjelmslev, Chomsky, Pike, and others. Dinneen considers the relative merits of the different theories and models, evaluating their claims and shortcomings. A thorough introduction to linguistics for newcomers to the field, this book will also be valuable to linguists, psychologists, philosophers, and historians of science for its evaluations of major theoretical concepts in light of enduring issues and problems in language studies. |
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Inhalt
Purposes in studying language 9 A simple example | 10 |
Kinds of meaning 19 What mean meant 20 Conventions 21 | 23 |
A central focus of phonology 35 Phonemics 35 English phonemes | 36 |
Phonemic analysis 47 Segmental phonemes of English 49 Motivated | 59 |
Some Minimal Pairs in American English 63 Reading | 77 |
Ancient linguistics | 113 |
Greek concern for language 113 Rhetoric 113 Rhetoric and | 119 |
Necessary and Contingent 121 Proposition and Sen | 126 |
Katz and Postals 378 Collocations 380 Description and Explanation | 382 |
Categories and Relations 387 Subcategorization 389 Factors | 392 |
Phonetic Representation 398 Proposed Universal Definitions 398 Fil | 401 |
Constants and Variables 403 Languages are Unique 404 Languages | 407 |
Meaning Contrasts 408 NEG and Q as Predicates 408 Visualizing | 415 |
Particle Wave Field 420 Reduction 420 Tagmemics and Drama | 422 |
Distribution vs Composition 424 Predicate Types | 429 |
Tentative Lexical Decompositions 442 Reading | 444 |
Analogy 133 3Term Analogies 134 4Term Analogies | 138 |
Phobias 141 Greek | 160 |
SOSEEMSAID 167 Ways of knowing 168 Knowledge | 169 |
Use of modistic terminology in theology 173 Peter of Spains Summu | 183 |
Etymology and historical linguistics | 199 |
William Jones 212 Etymology and History 213 Reconstruction | 214 |
Changes Change 226 Intervocalic consonants 226 The vocalic | 232 |
Edward Sapir | 259 |
Difference and Class 262 Analytic consequences 263 Meanings sig | 268 |
Importance of Radicals 269 Form and Meaning Essentials 270 Form | 283 |
about language 287 Subjective talk about language 287 Objective | 289 |
Bloomfields Language 1933 293 The study use and spread of lan | 295 |
Stable States 299 Basic and Modified Meaning 300 Sentence types | 301 |
Pattern Design 303 A Priori vs A posteriori 303 Rationalists | 305 |
Linguistic Fact 317 Contextual analysis 317 Abstraction | 318 |
tions Meaning 327 Linguistics Translation Contributions 327 Struc | 337 |
Transformational Grammar | 367 |
Syntactic Structures 367 Preface and Introduction 367 Demonstra | 375 |
XBar and Quirks NP VP Analysis 456 Constituents and Non | 462 |
COMP Paradigmatically 476 Abstract identity in concrete difference | 477 |
SubjectRaising 495 Generalizations | 496 |
Different Constants | 515 |
Argument structure 519 Lexical Entries 520 Interpreting lexical | 523 |
less Passives 526 Some NPs cannot be preposed 526 Unnecessary | 532 |
Relational Grammar 533 Signification value | 544 |
Grammar of Categories 545 A Montague Grammar 547 Logical | 554 |
TG MG Compared 555 The Nature of Syntac | 560 |
Notes | 567 |
Summary and Conclusions | 573 |
Logical talk about SNP VP 575 Grammatical talk about S | 575 |
view of Language 588 Hispanus terms and nonterms 588 Language | 589 |
and Tokens 602 Traces zeros and empty categories 602 Autonomous | 604 |
Reading 624 Notes | 624 |
643 | |