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The properties of language

The properties of language. Introduction.

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The properties of language

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  1. The properties of language

  2. Introduction All creatures are capable of communicating with other members of their species. However, only the human creature has the capacity for speech. We will concentrate on the properties which differentiate human language from all other forms of signaling and which make it a unique type of communication system.

  3. Communicative vs. informative • Communicative signals refer to what you intentionally communicate (e.g. “I want to apply for this job”). • Informative signals refer to what you unintentionally communicate (e.g. when a person listening to you becomes informed about you via a number of signals such as you have a cold, you are untidy etc.)

  4. Displacement • Human language-users can produce message to refer to past and future time and to other location. This property is called ‘displacement’. It allows human to talk about things and events not present in the immediate environment. • Animal communication lacks this property. However, bee communication has at least some degree of displacement as a feature.(cf. the difference between human and bee displacement)

  5. Arbitrariness • A property of linguistic signs is their arbitrary relationship with the objects they are used to indicate. There is no natural connection between a linguistic form and its meaning. • However, there are some words in language which echo the sounds of objects or activities. These onomatopoeic words are relatively rare.

  6. For the majority of animal signals there appears to be a clear connection between the conveyed message and the signal used to convey it. This non-arbitrariness of animal signaling may be connected with the fact that the set of signals used in communication is finite.

  7. By: Ashjan Ahmed Alhindi

  8. It is a feature of all languages that novel utterances are continually being CREATED. • A child learning language is especially active in forming and producing utterances which he or she has never heard before. • Adults make new words for new inventions and events. • This property of human language has been termed Productivity or Creativity or Open-endedness. It is linked to the fact that the potential number of utterances in any human language is infinite.

  9. Animals have fixed reference. Each signal refers to something, but these signals can not be manipulated. (closed communication systems). For Example: Ten Bees were taken to the top, shown the food source, and sent off to tell the rest of the hive about their find. They flew around in all directions, but couldn’t locate the food. The bee cannot manipulate its communication system to create a ‘new’ message indicate vertical distance. (the bees have no word for up in their language. Moreover, they cannot invent one).

  10. Cultural Transmission

  11. We inherit Genetic Traits such as: ( skin, hair and eye color, body shape, diseases….est.) What about language, is it inherited? No, it’s not. Language is acquired in a culture with other speakers. • This process is called Cultural Transmission • Cultural Transmission is also called Cultural Learning.

  12. What does cultural transmission mean? • It means passing the language from one generation to the next. • Itis the way a group of people or animals within a society or culture tend to learn and pass on new information (Wikipedia.) • Humans are not born with the ability to produce utterances in a specific language. • Cultural transmission of a specific language is crucial in the human acquisition process.

  13. In the case of animals, the signals that they are communicating is instinctive. So, the general pattern of their communication is instinctive and not learned. Unlike human infants. • If a human infant grows up in isolation, he will not produce an “instinctive” language. Dalal Ahmad Amer.

  14. Discreteness By: MashaelTalal Al-ThaQafy

  15. Discreteness Definition: *The state or quality of being discrete, separated or distinct *The quality of being individual

  16. The soundsused in language are meaningfully distinct

  17. Each sound in the language is treated as discrete

  18. These different sounds could be imagined as of the spoken language have the same difference in the written set such as :

  19. Pack Back Different in meaning

  20. The conclusion is: Two distinct levels: The level of distinct sounds e.g. P , b The level of distinct meanings e.g. Pack , Back

  21. By: ShroogHussineHarise shroog Hussine Harise 43004289

  22. Duality “double articulation” : the organization of human language at two levels or layers simultaneously. In speech production, we have two levels shroog Hussine Harise 43004289

  23. 1- A physical level (distinct sounds): at which we can produce individual sounds, like n, b and i. As individual sounds, none of these discrete forms has any intrinsic meaning shroog Hussine Harise 43004289

  24. 2- Producing a meaning level (distinct meanings): In a particular combination such as bin, we have another level producing a meaning that is different from the meaning of the combination in nib. shroog Hussine Harise 43004289

  25. This duality of levels is one of the most economical features of human language because, with a limited set of discrete sounds, we are capable of producing a very large number of sound combinations (e.g. words) which are distinct in meaning.

  26. Other properties of language By: BashayerAl-malki

  27. Reflexivity –Displacement-Arbitrariness Productivity -Cultural Transmission–Duality • These six properties may be taken as the core features of human language . • Human language does of course have many other properties, but these are not uniquely human characteristic.

  28. Human linguistic communication is typically generated via the vocal organs and perceived via ears. However linguistic communication can also be transmitted without sound ,via writing or via the sign language of the deaf. Many other species (e.g. dolphins) use the vocal-auditory channel. Vocal-auditory channel

  29. Reciprocity: • Any speaker –sender of a linguistic signal can also be a listener- receiver. • Specialization: • Linguistic signals do not normally serve any other type of purpose, such as breathing or feeding. • Non-directionality: • Linguistic signals can be picked up by anyone within hearing, even unseen. • Rapid fade: • Linguistic signals are produced and disappear quickly.

  30. These are properties of the spoken language but not of the written language. • They are also not present in many animal communication systems . • Such properties are best treated as ways of describing human language ,but not as a means of distinguishing it from other systems of communication.

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