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Contrastive Language Analysis HC9008

Contrastive Language Analysis HC9008. LAI Siu Yin / LI Xiaoying. Lexical Categories & The Nature of Grammar. Clear definitions and delineations in lexical categories exist. Lexical Categories & The Nature of Grammar. Clear definitions and delineations in lexical categories exist

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Contrastive Language Analysis HC9008

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  1. Contrastive Language Analysis HC9008 LAI Siu Yin / LI Xiaoying

  2. Lexical Categories & The Nature of Grammar • Clear definitions and delineations in lexical categories exist

  3. Lexical Categories & The Nature of Grammar • Clear definitions and delineations in lexical categories exist • Categories have one essential feature each, providing grammatical features

  4. Lexical Categories & The Nature of Grammar • Clear definitions and delineations in lexical categories exist • Categories have one essential feature each, providing grammatical features • Definitions of categories mainly syntactic (though intertwined with morphology and sematics)

  5. Lexical Categories & The Nature of Grammar • Clear definitions and delineations in lexical categories exist • Categories have one essential feature each, providing grammatical features • Definitions of categories mainly syntactic (though intertwined with morphology and sematics) • All natural human languages have the same three lexical categories and core grammatical behaviour

  6. Proof-By-Example - Languages Observed Chichewa Mohawk Edo Warlpiri Tzeltal Spanish Mayali Nahuatl Kannada Greek Tukang Besi Vata Hebrew Quechua

  7. Language Acquisition Innate within the human mind - Rationalist Theory Research on infant cognition supports this - reasoning patterns appropriate to these conceptual categories occurs universally Studies indicate that infants all over the world acquire the same initial words

  8. Language Acquisition • Innate conceptual knowledge before grammatical knowledge • Languages vary greatly in terms of which notions are represented by which lexical category

  9. Language Acquisition • Physical Object • Dynamic Event • Physical Property

  10. Universal grammar Part of the knowledge that resides in the human mind of a person who knows a language.

  11. Universal Grammar If we characterize the knowledge that a person has when he or she knows a possible human language, we find that some things recur in every case (Italian, Arabic, Russian, etc.)

  12. In Chomsky's words Universal grammar is: the system of principles, conditions, and rules that are elements or properties of all human languages.

  13. Chomsky and Universal Grammar Chomsky argues that universal grammar is not learned by mimicry or lessons or examples and correction, but is instead innate in the mind of every human being, a part of our genetic endowment. People who know a language know universal grammar.

  14. Implications of Universal Grammar These types of evidence lead linguists to conclude that the principles of universal grammar have certain associated parameters which can be fixed one way or another. When a potential speaker knows universal grammarand sets all the associated parameters in particular ways, he or she knows the grammar of a particular language.

  15. Question • Are some languages just more universal than others? Or more specifically, give themselves more readily to L2 development in the individual based on syntactic universality.

  16. As Chomsky puts it….. "We may think of the language faculty as a complex and intricate network of some sort associated with a switch box consisting of an array of switches that can be in one of two positions. Unless the switches are set one way or another, the system does not function. When they are set in one of the permissible ways, then the system functions in accordance with its nature, but differently, depending on how the switches are set. The fixed network is the system of principles of universal grammar; the switches are the parameters... When these switches are set, [a person] has command of a particular language and knows the facts of that language: that a particular expression has a particular meaning, and so on. Each permissible array of switch settings determines a particular language."

  17. Language Constitutes The universal grammar that we all know, the parameters that we each set for our own particular language, and the lexicon that we each learn for our own particular language

  18. Question Language skills are acquired non-uniformly across different people. How does knowledge of universal grammar and cognition allow us to optimize language acquisition in infants? Would the resulting effectiveness/ ineffectiveness be a proof/disproof of universal grammar?

  19. END

  20. Lexical Categories - Verbs, Nouns & AdjectivesBaker, Mark C. (2003) Research Questions Arguments Development Methodology Analysis Claims Conclusions Findings Arguments Questions Disagreements Further Study

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