Bill Mayblin,R.L.Trask

Linguistics

  • amrrixanohas quoted3 months ago
    AND HOW COULD WE TRY A CASE IN COURT IF THE LAW WERE CONSTANTLY CHANGING DURING THE TRIAL?
  • Sevara Butaevahas quoted3 years ago
    A PEOPLE’S SPEECH IS THEIR SPIRIT, AND THEIR SPIRIT IS THEIR SPEECH
  • Soufiane Elberradhas quoted4 years ago
    A PEOPLE’S SPEECH IS THEIR SPIRIT, AND THEIR SPIRIT IS THEIR SPEECH.
  • Дарья Патрушеваhas quoted4 years ago
    A sign language is a real language, just like English or Spanish. A sign language can be acquired by a child as its first language. A sign language has a large vocabulary and a rich and elaborate system of grammar: breaking a rule of grammar is just as bad in a sign language as it is in a spoken language.
  • Дарья Патрушеваhas quoted4 years ago
    Every spoken language contains a small number of basic sound units, or phonemes. Among the phonemes of English are /k/, /æ/ and /t/. If we produce these phonemes in the order /kæt /, we get the word cat. But the order /tæk/ gives us tack, while /ækt/ yields act, /æt/ gives at, and /tækt/ gives tact or tacked (which are pronounced identically, in spite of their different structures).
  • Дарья Патрушеваhas quoted4 years ago
    How many languages are there? At present, well over 6,500.
  • elfilina72has quoted5 years ago
    Third, if an n is immediately followed by a consonant pronounced with the lips, like b, change the n to m.

    These rules produce the required result:

    impenetrable
  • Некто Никтоhas quoted5 years ago
    A further aspect of Saussure’s work is an emphasis upon two very different approaches to the study of language: a synchronic approach, in which we focus on the structure of a language at a particular moment in time (not necessarily the present), and a diachronic approach, in which we look at the development of a language over time.
  • Некто Никтоhas quoted5 years ago
    a structuralist approach, it is the structural relation that matters, not the objective phonetic facts.
  • Некто Никтоhas quoted5 years ago
    A LINGUISTIC SIGN IS NOT A LINK BETWEEN A THING AND A NAME, BUT BETWEEN A CONCEPT AND A SOUND-PATTERN. THE SOUND PATTERN IS NOT ACTUALLY A SOUND, FOR A SOUND IS SOMETHING PHYSICAL. A SOUND PATTERN IS THE HEARER’S PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPRESSION OF A SOUND.
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