Langue vs Parole
Langue is the shared system of language rules, while parole is how individuals actually use language in real situations.
synchrony vs diachrony
Synchrony studies a language at a single point in time, while diachrony studies how a language changes over time.
paradigmatic vs syntagmatic
Paradigmatic: Relationship of substitution – words that can replace each other in a given context
Think: “Which words could I put here instead?”
Syntagmatic: Relationship of combination – words that co-occur in sequence
Think: “Which words go together in a sequence?”
Pidgin // creole
simplified contact language that develops when speakers of different native languages need to communicate, usually for trade or work, and has no native speakers.
fully developed language that evolves from a pidgin when it becomes the first language of a speech community, with expanded grammar and vocabulary.
Phoneme
the smallest sound unit that can distinguish meaning in a language, e.g.: /k/ vs /f/ (kill vs fill)
Allophone
a context dependent variant of a phoneme that does not change meaning, e.g. the /p/ in pin (p ) and cap (p)
Allomorph
they represent different phonetic variants of a morpheme, which can occur in different contexts, such as plural or tense forms. For example, the plural morpheme can be pronounced as /s/, /z/, or /ız/ depending on the word.
[cats] -> unvoiced ending so unvoiced /s/
[dogs]-> voiced ending so voiced /z/
[horses] -> /iz/ to distinguish singular and plural
Morpheme
smallest meaningful unit
e.g. un/break/able
What are derivational morphemes?
Derivational morphemes are bound morphemes that:
• change the meaning of a word
• and/or change the word class (noun, verb, adjective, etc.)
Examples:
happy (adjective) → un + happy → unhappy (adjective, opposite meaning)
teach (verb) → teach + -er → teacher (noun)
nation (noun) → nation + -al → national (adjective)
💡 Derivational morphemes create new words.
What are inflectional morphemes?
Inflectional morphemes
• Do not create new words
• Do not change word class
• Only add grammatical information (tense, plural, comparison)
walk → walk**-ed**
cat → cat**-s**
big → big**-ger**
What are the 11 word formation processes?
Derivation Adding prefixes or suffixes to a base word to create a new word.• happy -> unhappy, happiness• teach-> teacher
CompoundingJoining two or more words to make a new one. • notebook, toothpaste, blackboard
Conversion (Zero Derivation)Changing the word class without changing the form • to Google (verb) <- Google (noun)• a run (noun) <- run (verb)
BlendingCombining parts of two words. • smog (smoke+fog)• brunch (breakfast+lunch)
ClippingShortening a longer word. • phone (telephone)• ad (advertisement)
Acronyms & InitialismsForming words from the first letters of phrase • Acronym (pronounced as a word): NASA; UNICEF• Initialism (pronounced letter by letter): FBI; USA
Borrowing Taking words from other languages. • piano (Italian)• tsunami (Japanese)
Coinage Inventing entirely new words, often brand names. • Kleenex, Xerox, Google
Back-formationCreating a shorter word by removing an affix (often mistakenly). • edit <- editor• burgle<- burglar
ReduplicationRepeating all or a part of a word. • byebye, zigzag, chitchat
EponymsWords formed from names of people and places. • sandwich• diesel
Whats suppletion?
Suppletion in linguistics is the phenomenon where a word's forms come from different roots, rather than a single root, to fill grammatical roles like tense or comparison.
E.g. go and went
WHat is a performative verb?
It the action by being said, not describing it.
I promise to help you. → saying it creates the promise
I apologize for being late. → saying it is the apology
What are the differences between GA and British IPA?
Rhoticity
RP → non-rhotic: /r/ is not pronounced after vowels
car → /kɑː/
GA → rhotic: /r/ is always pronounced
car → /kɑr/
Vowel differences
Example
RP (British)
GA (American)
lot
/lɒt/
/lɑt/
Diphthongs
RP: /eɪ/ (day), /əʊ/ (go), /aɪ/ (high), /ɪə/ (here)
GA: /eɪ/ (day), /oʊ/ (go), /aɪ/ (high), /ɪr/ (here)
Consonants
/t/ in the middle of words:
RP: often pronounced clearly → better /ˈbɛt.ər/
GA: often a flap → better /ˈbɛɾər/ (sounds like /d/)
/r/ is always pronounced in GA, rarely in RP
What are endocentric and exocentric compounds?
Endocentric: Head is part of the word, e.g. butterbeer
Exocentric: head is not part of the word, e.g. skyscraper
Lingua Franca
A lingua franca is a language adopted for communication between speakers of different native languages.
What is a performative verb?
A performative verb is a verb that performs the action it names simply by being uttered, usually in the first person present tense.
Semasiology
the branch of semantics that starts from a linguistic form (word or expression) and investigates its meaning(s) and how these meanings relate to others.
Starting with the word “bank”, we analyze:
financial institution
river bank
Euphemism
A euphemism is a mild, polite, or indirect word or phrase used to replace one that might sound harsh, unpleasant, or embarrassing.
He died -> He passed away.
Polysemy
One word, related meanings.
Bank
Antonymy
Words with opposite meanings.
gradable: the opposite is not absolute
hot<->cold -> "extremely hot, very hot" etc
relational: on opposite sides of a relationship (both belonging together)
parent - child lend - borrow
polar opposition (complementary antonym): extreme opposites on a dimension, no middleground exists
male-female
Hyponomy
A hyponym is a specific example of a category; a hypernym is the general category.
hypernym: fruit
hyponym: apple, banana
Meronymy (part-whole relations)
A meronym is a part of a whole.
wheel is a part of a car
Homonymy
same form, unrelated meanings
bat (animal) /bat (used in sports)
homophony: write-right
homography: row /r
Collocation
words that commonly occur together
make a decision
heavy rain
Semantic roles
meaning roles in events
agent (doer): The dog (agent) chased the cat
patient (receiver): the cat (patient)
Denotation
refers to the literal or primary meaning of a word
"home" denotes a place where one lives, but its connotation may include feelings of comfort and safety (context is being excluded)
Prototype theory
Some representatives that are better for that category than others
Fruit: apple
bird: blackbird
Onomasiology
the branch of semantics that starts from a concept or meaning and investigates which linguistic forms (names, words, expressions) are used to express it.
Example:
Starting with the concept VEHICLE, we list: car, bus, bicycle, truck, motorcycle
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