Study of language_week1_DT

Linguistics
1 / 28
next
Slide 1: Slide
CommunicatieHBOStudiejaar 2

This lesson contains 28 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

Items in this lesson

Linguistics

Slide 1 - Slide

Linguistics: Learning aims
P3
The student gains insight into the various aspects of language and communication in the area of applied linguistics relevant to the teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.
P4
The student can demonstrate awareness of how languages are learned and base his/her vision of language teaching on this awareness.
The student can develop a lesson (series) with the aim to promote language awareness of his/her pupils.

Slide 2 - Slide

Slide 3 - Slide

Study of Language week 1

Slide 4 - Slide

General aims & test
  • The student has insight into general linguistics, sociolinguistics and historical insights based on the theories of applied linguistics.
  • The student knows the substance-related linguistic terminology and can recognize and apply his/her knowledge on examples from the target language.
  • The student understands the importance of linguistic knowledge and sees the link between linguistic knowledge and the teaching of the target language.

Slide 5 - Slide

Have you always wanted to know...
  • whether animals can talk?
  • whether it is true than women talk more than men?
  • why some words in different languages appear to be so similar?
  • why the Chinese write with other “letters” than we do?
  • what the differences are between a language, a dialect and an accent?
  • how deaf people communicate?
  • where words come from?
  • why teenagers do not want adults to sound like them?
  • why tomorrow never comes?
  • how you can analyse the structure of a word?
  • whether it is true that the Eskimos have so many words for snow….?

Slide 6 - Slide

Slide 7 - Slide

The Origin of Language  (chapter 1) 
Learning aims:
  • You know a number of theories on the origin of language and you understand the ideas behind these theories. 



Slide 8 - Slide

Why are there so many theories about the origins of speech?
A
Because we don't know anything about the origins of writing either
B
Because there is no evidence of how human started to develop the capability of speaking
C
Because there are so many different languages
D
Because speaking is the most difficult skill

Slide 9 - Quiz

divine source
natural sounds
social interaction
physical adaptation
tool making source
genetic source

Slide 10 - Slide

social interaction source:
yo-he-ho theory
the physical adaptation  
source
the genetic source
The natural sound  
source: 
the pooh-pooh theory
the natural sound source:
the bow-wow theory
the tool-making source
The divine source

Slide 11 - Drag question

Slide 12 - Slide

Some people find it hard to believe that onomatopeic words would be the source of language. Why?
A
because abstract concepts have no sound
B
because not all animals make sounds
C
because not all emotions are expressed with interjections
D
because the sounds animals make are different in different languages

Slide 13 - Quiz

In the story of the Tower of Babel, God punished the people by making them all speak different languages. This seems connected to both the divine theory and .....
A
the natural sound source (emotions)
B
the social interaction source
C
the genetic source
D
the tool making source

Slide 14 - Quiz

The physical adaptation source claims that the human body has features that favour the use of speech. Which one(s) particularly?
A
teeth and lips
B
mouth and tongue
C
larynx and pharynx
D
all of these

Slide 15 - Quiz

Just checking...
Learning aims chapter 1:
  • You know a number of theories on the origin of language and you understand the ideas behind these theories. 



Slide 16 - Slide

Word Formation (chapter 5)
Learning aims:
  • You know the main processes involved in the introduction of new words into a language.
  • You can link these processes to examples.

Slide 17 - Slide

borrowing/
loan translation
clipping/
hypocorism
back-formation
compounding/
blending
conversion
coinage/
eponyms
acronyms
derivation

Slide 18 - Slide

add a prefix
and/or a suffix
to the word FRIEND

Slide 19 - Mind map

In this example Shakespeare uses which process on the word "glove":
A scaly gauntlet ... / Must glove this hand
A
conversion
B
back-formation
C
clipping
D
loan-translation

Slide 20 - Quiz

Which of these English words was NOT borrowed from Dutch?
A
mannequin
B
boss
C
frolic
D
origin

Slide 21 - Quiz

eponym
coinage
acronyms
teddy bear
NASA
asperine
scuba
band-aid
sadistic

Slide 22 - Drag question

clipping
hypocorism
backformation
to donate
hanky
ad
Hey Danny, can you bring your esky to the barbie? My rellies are coming over.
fridge
destruct

Slide 23 - Drag question

borrowing
Loan-Translation
Compounding
Blending
conversion
derivation
homeless
butter
infotainment
yoghurt
perros calientes
suitcase

Slide 24 - Drag question

The verb "to milkshake (milkshaking)" emerged in 2019. Which 2 processes formed this word?
A
compounding + derivation
B
compounding + conversion
C
backformation + conversion
D
backformation + derivation

Slide 25 - Quiz

Just checking....
Learning aims chapter 5:
  • You know the main processes involved in the introduction of new words into a language.
  • You can link these processes to examples.

Slide 26 - Slide

Slide 27 - Slide

Follow-up
  • re-read or study chapter 1 & 5
  • Prepare for next week's lesson by studying chapter 6 & 9
  • read the information on #OO

Slide 28 - Slide