- MINISTRY OF HIGHER AND SECONDARY SPECIAL EDUCATION OF THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTON.
- FERGHANA STATE UNIVERSITY Department: Foreign language. Chair: Foreign language and literature. Group: 17.74 Theme: Typological classification Teacher: Student: Buzrukova Sugdiyona Ferghana-2020.
Approaches to language classification - Genetic classification
- Linguistic typology
Genetic Classification Genetic classification - Languages with related historical decent are said to be genetically related.
- ‘language families’
Language families Linguistic Typology Linguistic typology - Languages are grouped together according to the similarities of their linguistic features.
Linguistic Universals - The common linguistic features that are found in all or most languages.
How to describe linguistic universals - Absolute universals vs. universal tendencies
- Implicational universals
- Markedness theory
Absolute universals vs. universal tendencies - Absolute universals
- The linguistic features that occur in ALL languages
- Universal tendencies
- The linguistic features that occur in MOST languages
Implicational universals - The presence of one linguistic feature in one language must indicate the occurrence of another.
- If A is found in language L, B must be also present in language L.
- The implication is one-way.
- Example:
- If one language has fricative phonemes, it will also have stop phonemes
Implicational universals: Example - The implication is one-way.
- Example:
- If one language has fricative phonemes (/s/, /z/), it will also have stop phonemes (/p/, /t/).
- But not vice versa.
Markedness theory - The most common/default features are unmarked.
- The less common features are marked.
Markedness theory: example - Gender in nouns
- Which is marked? Masculine or feminine?
- Prince-princess; actor-actress
- Doctor-female doctor; nurse-male nurse
- 萬綠叢中一點紅
Typological classification by - Phonology
- Morphology
- Syntax
Typology: phonology - Vowel systems
- Consonant systems
- Suprasegmental systems
- Syllable structure
Typology: phonology: vowel - Universals
- The most common vowel system
- 5 vowels /a/-/i/-/u/-/e/-/o/
- The most common phonemes
- Front vowel phonemes are generally unrounded.
- Low vowels are generally unrounded.
Typology: phonology: Consonant - Universals
- All languages have stops
- /p, t, k/
- The most common fricative phoneme is /s/
- Most of languages have at least one nasal.
- Implicational universals
- Fricatives -> stops
- Voiced obstruents -> voiceless obstruents
- Affricates -> stops and fricatives
Typology: phonology: suprasemental - Types
- Tone languages
- Languages that use pitch to make semantic distinctions of words
- Mandarin Chinese
- Stress languages
- Syllable structure
Typology: morphology - The isolating type
- The polysynthetic type
- The synthetic type
Typology: morphology: The isolating/analytic type - One word represents one single morpheme.
- Mandarin Chinese
Typology: morphology: The polysynthetic type - One single word with a long string of roots and affixes
- The semantic equivalent of one sentence in other languages.
- Qasu-iir-sar-vig-ssar-si-ngit-luunar-nar-puq ‘some one did not find a completely suitable resting place.’ (Inuktitut)
Typology: morphology: The agglutinating type - An agglutinating words
- Contains several morphemes
- The root and affixes in the words can be semantically identified.
Swahili
Tu –ta –wa -on- esha
we-fut.-them-see-cause
'we will show them'
An aggluinating example: Antidisestablishmentarianism - establish (9)
- to set up, put in place, or institute (originally from the Latin stare, to stand)
- dis-establish (12)
- ending the established status of a body, in particular a church, given such status by law, such as the Church of England
- disestablish-ment (16)
- the separation of church and state (specifically in this context it is the political movement of the 1860s in Britain)
- anti-disestablishment (20)
- opposition to disestablishment
- antidisestablishment-arian (25)
- an advocate of opposition to disestablishment
- Antidisestablishmentarian-ism (28)
Typology: morphology: The fusional/inflectional type - A fusional/inflectional word contains several morphemes which indicate grammatical categories.
- Ein kleiner Hamster "a little hamster" (nominative case)
- Der kleine Hamster "the little hamster"
(nominative case) - Ich sah den kleinen Hamster "I saw the little hamster" (accusative case)
- Mit kleinem Hamster "with little hamster" (dative case).
Typology: syntax Word order: SVO word order: SOV - 私 は 箱 を 開けます。
- watashi-wa-hako-o-akemasu.
- I box open
- ‘I open the box.’
word order: OSV
Sentence
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قرأ المدرس الكتاب
| | | | |
Words
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الكتاب
|
المدرس
|
قرأ
| | | |
al-kitāba
|
al-mudarrisu
|
Qara'a
| | | |
Read.
|
the teacher
|
the book
| | |
Parts
|
Object
|
Subject Verb
| | | |
Translation
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The teacher read the book.
| | | | | THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |