Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Bound Morphemes Pg Essays
Bound Morphemes Pg Essays Bound Morphemes Pg Essay Bound Morphemes Pg Essay Notes from live broadcast 29/07/09 Mrs Masehela made a comment at the beginning of the session that because of a large amount of students receiving their study material late, she would focus only on what is relevant for the exam during this broadcast ââ¬â I really hope this is the case. The chapters I refer to in these notes are from the prescribed book: Investigating English. Chapter One A system of signs for human communication there are different modes of linguistic communication- writing signs and oral. Language is a semiotic system. Semiotics: the study of signs and symbols and their meanings.Language is a system where the individual elements ââ¬Ësignsââ¬â¢, take their overall meaning from HOW they are combined with other elements. Think of the English language spelling patterns and compare that with another language you know. Think of the road signs and their meanings or any other sign and its meaning. de Saussure theory of linguistic signs. pg 6 The signifier â⠬â the sequence of sounds (word), which makes up the sign e. g. w/a/t/e/r this is the symbol. The signified ââ¬â the mental or physical reality of the sign e. g. water. The properties of language (unique) pg 9 Displacement ââ¬â talk about things that are not in sight. Arbitrariness ââ¬â no natural relationship between a word and itââ¬â¢s meaning. Discreetness ââ¬â separate or distinct. Each sound functions as an individual. Duality ââ¬â distinct sounds do not convey meaning but carry meaning when combined with other sounds. (ooo, eee, aaa by themselves no meaning). Productivity ââ¬â speakers produce and interpret an infinite number of new signals, able to produce a sentence without memorising. Cultural transmission ââ¬â language is passed on from one generation to the next (mother tongue).Chapter 4 Words and word formation (the structure of words) Morpheme ââ¬â pg 63 the smallest meaningful unit of a language. e. g. ââ¬âful, -er, un-, ive. Free morphemes ââ¬â pg 65 independent words, simple canââ¬â¢t be broken down. car, sure, fine, chew, school, a, the, Two kinds ââ¬â content/lexical morphemes Open group-new words can be added. They carry meaning ââ¬â fine, chew. function/grammatical morphemes Closed group-new words hardly ever added. When attached, work together with content ââ¬â but, if, this, and. Bound morphemes ââ¬â pg 67 can not occur unattached. (not a word on its own) also called affixes. e. g. ââ¬âful, un-, -s, -er. the base or the stem is the morpheme to which prefixes and suffixes are attached. e. g. safe, drive, tangle. Inflectional morphemes- pg 68 do not change the grammatical status of a word. e. g school (noun), schools (noun), talk (verb), talked (verb) can change quantities, tenses, plurality. [pic] see page 69 as well. Derivational morphemes ââ¬â pg 69 these change the grammatical class of a word e. g. ââ¬âly slowly verb adjective adverb Chapter 7 La nguage and meanings. Nature of meaning. Language is a conduit/channel along which thoughts are transferred. Meaning canââ¬â¢t be separated from language. Lexemes. can have a variety of forms called variant forms. when change from one to another, meaning changes as well. [pic] Chapter 8 Language acquisition. Acquisition ââ¬â what we are born with, learn as we grow up to about 13 years of age. Learning ââ¬â what we are formally taught, from about 13 years. Different theories- Imitation ââ¬â child imitates language they hear around them. Innateness ââ¬â humans born with a capacity for a language development. Input motherese/caretaker speech, more time spent with. Cognitive ââ¬â child develops a concept first, able to remember/make sense of words of language. Chapter 8 contâ⬠¦ Language acquisition ââ¬â observe any child between the ages of 1m ââ¬â 6y. study the section on stages of language acquisition pg 133-135 of textbook. this is my summar y of this section ââ¬â not possible to explain but is possible to observe, record and chart. proceed at own pace, reach different stages at different ages sequence of stages, generally the same Stage 1 ââ¬â , | |attention/discomfort |by short vowel |longer then cooing |resembling speech ââ¬â |recognisable objects|combine 2 |nouns- omit the | | | |ââ¬â high to low |1st real signs | | |am,-ed ââ¬âing, | | | | |language development| | | | Chapter 9 English and education 1. What role should English play in your community/country? 2. What role is English playing in your community/country today? 3. The role and importance of the standard variety of English. 1. Unifying language, able to interact with business partners, economically possible to gain recognition and be understood. 2.Kind can come from/various ââ¬â have varying linguistic backgrounds, multi/mono-lingual ââ¬â some communities are flooded by people from other parts of the world; English has a r ole, as a unifier, business partner, feel accepted. Beyond border of country ââ¬â what is the role there? 3. Is it really important to know standard variety of English or just ââ¬Å"blackâ⬠English, ââ¬Å"Hispanicâ⬠English or must it be standard English. Please correct me here/add in or what ever ââ¬â I seem to have missed the boat here; however I did write every thing she spoke about? I suspect we need to prepare this for a long question. Exam 2 hours. Ensure you write in paragraphs ââ¬Å"give a critical.. â⬠give own view on topic, -ve and +ve side substantiate. ââ¬Å"discussâ⬠write in paragraphs, your own view is not necessary here.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.