1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form...

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1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning

Transcript of 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form...

Page 1: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

1Language Typology

Anna Siewierska&

Dik BakkerLancaster University

Variationin

Structure:Form and Meaning

Page 2: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

2Language Typology

Typology: what is it?

What is language typology about?

Page 3: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

3Language Typology

Typology: what is it?

What is language typology about?

1. Looks at 'all' the languages of the world

Page 4: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

4Language Typology

Typology: what is it?

What is language typology about?

1. Looks at 'all' the languages of the world

2. Describes differences and correspondences between them

Page 5: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

5Language Typology

Typology: what is it?

What is language typology about?

1. Looks at 'all' the languages of the world

2. Describes differences and correspondences between them

3. Systematizes these observations

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6Language Typology

Typology: what is it?

What is language typology about?

1. Looks at 'all' the languages of the world

2. Describes differences and correspondences between them

3. Systematizes these observations

4. Tries to explain them (optional)

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7Language Typology

Typology: goal

What should be the overall impression?

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8Language Typology

Typology: goal

What should be the overall impression?

- Languages are (very) different on the outside

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9Language Typology

Typology: goal

What should be the overall impression?

- Languages are (very) different on the outside

- When you look a bit better, they have a lot in common

Page 10: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

10Language Typology

Typology: goal

What should be the overall impression?

- Languages are (very) different on the outside

- When you look a bit better, they have a lot in common

- They make choices from restricted options for largely the same categories

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11Language Typology

Typology: goal

What should be the overall impression?

- Languages are (very) different on the outside

- When you look a bit better, they have a lot in common

- They make choices from restricted options for largely the same categories

→ They serve the same purpose: human communication

Page 12: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

12Language Typology

Typology: goal

What should be the overall impression?

- Languages are (very) different on the outside

- When you look a bit better, they have a lot in common

- They make choices from restricted options for largely the same categories

→ They serve the same purpose: human communication

→ They should be learned in first 5-7 years

Page 13: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

13Language Typology

Typology: how?

How to proceed?

Page 14: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

14Language Typology

Typology: how?

How to proceed?

- Start out from what they already know about language:

Page 15: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

15Language Typology

Typology: how?

How to proceed?

- Start out from what they already know about language:

- English: spoken vs written; formal vs informal; etc

Page 16: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

16Language Typology

Typology: how?

How to proceed?

- Start out from what they already know about language:

- English: spoken vs written; formal vs informal; etc

- English dialects (local!)

Page 17: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

17Language Typology

Typology: how?

How to proceed?

- Start out from what they already know about language:

- English: spoken vs written; formal vs informal; etc

- English dialects (local!)

- Other languages known to the particular group:

Welsh, Gaelic, Romany, Urdu, Pashto, French, …

Page 18: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

18Language Typology

Typology: how?

How to proceed?

- Start out from what they already know about language:

- English: spoken vs written; formal vs informal; etc

- English dialects (local!)

- Other languages known to the particular group:

Welsh, Gaelic, Romany, Urdu, Pashto, French, …

- European languages

Page 19: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

19Language Typology

Typology: how?

How to proceed?

- Start out from what they already know about language:

- English: spoken vs written; formal vs informal; etc

- English dialects (local!)

- Other languages known to the particular group:

Welsh, Gaelic, Romany, Urdu, Pashto, French, …

- European languages

- Rest of the world

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20Language Typology

Typology: how?

Further requirements:

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21Language Typology

Typology: how?

Further requirements:

- No jargon but terms they know

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22Language Typology

Typology: how?

Further requirements:

- No jargon but terms they know

- Interactive: involve them

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23Language Typology

Typology: how?

Further requirements:

- No jargon but terms they know

- Interactive: involve them

- Clear, simple examples from 'exotic' languages

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24Language Typology

Typology: how?

Further requirements:

- No jargon but terms they know

- Interactive: involve them

- Clear, simple examples from 'exotic' languages

- Sound and Pictures

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25Language Typology

Typology: how?

Two forms of implementation of the course:

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26Language Typology

Typology: how?

Two forms of implementation of the course:

1. Comprehensive: series of 1 hour lessons < 5 (min), 7, 9, … , 15 (max) >

- General introduction- 2 lessons per topic (max = 6):

L1: introduction to the topicL2: exercises and discussion

- Closing lesson

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27Language Typology

Typology: how?

Two forms of implementation of the course:

1. Comprehensive: series of 1 hour lessons < 5 (min), 7, 9, … , 15 (max) >

- General introduction- 2 lessons per topic (max = 6):

L1: introduction to the topicL2: exercises and discussion

- Closing lesson

2. Compact: 2 or 3 x 1 hour

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28Language Typology

Versions

Version 1: Comprehensive

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29Language Typology

Comprehensive

Maximum 15x 1 hour lesson:

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30Language Typology

Comprehensive

Maximum 15x 1 hour lesson:

I. What is Typology?

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31Language Typology

Comprehensive

Maximum 15x 1 hour lesson:

I. What is Typology?

T1. Articles (2 x Intro + exercise + Discussion)

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32Language Typology

Comprehensive

Maximum 15x 1 hour lesson:

I. What is Typology?

T1. Articles (2 x Intro + exercise + Discussion) T2. Word Order (I + e + D)T3. Negation (I + e + D)T4. Passive (I + e + D)T5. Pronominal subjects (I + e + D)T6. Subject versus Object (I + e + D)

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33Language Typology

Comprehensive

Maximum 15x 1 hour lesson:

I. What is Typology?

T1. Articles (2 x Intro + exercise + Discussion) T2. Word Order (I + e + D)T3. Negation (I + e + D)T4. Passive (I + e + D)T5. Pronominal subjects (I + e + D)T6. Subject versus Object (I + e + D)

C. Concluding lesson

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34Language Typology

Topics

I. INTRODUCTION

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Speaker of a language

“Everyone in this room speaks ENGLISH”

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Speaker of a language

“Everyone in this room speaks ENGLISH”

Some: English is their only language mother tongue

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Speaker of a language

“Everyone in this room speaks ENGLISH”

Some: English is their only language mother tongue

?

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Speaker of a language

“Everyone in this room speaks ENGLISH”

Some: English is their only language mother tongue

Some: English + other language(s):

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39

Speaker of a language

“Everyone in this room speaks ENGLISH”

Some: English is their only language mother tongue

Some: English + other language(s):

> both are mother tongue multilingual

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40

Speaker of a language

“Everyone in this room speaks ENGLISH”

Some: English is their only language mother tongue

Some: English + other language(s):

> both are mother tongue multilingual ?

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41

Speaker of a language

“Everyone in this room speaks ENGLISH”

Some: English is their only language mother tongue

Some: English + other language(s):

> both are mother tongue multilingual

> second language

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42

Speaker of a language

“Everyone in ENGLAND speaks ENGLISH”

Either as a first or a second language

The same English everywhere in England ?

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English

England

ENGLISH

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English

England Lancashire

ENGLISH LANCASHIRE DIALECT

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English

England Lancashire Lancaster

ENGLISH LANCASHIRE LANCASTER DIALECT ACCENT

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Dialects

Dialects:

English

Lancashire:

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Dialects

Dialects:

English

Lancashire:

‘That were me brother what went to America’

?

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Dialects

Dialects:

English

Lancashire:

‘That were me brother what went to America’

was my who

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Dialects

Dialects:

English

Lancashire:

‘That were me brother what went to America’

was my who?

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Dialects

Dialects:

English

Lancashire:

‘That were me brother what went to America’

was my who Standard English

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Dialects

English in the UK = around 45 dialects

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Dialects

English in the UK = around 45 dialects

NORTH: Lancashire Cumbrian

Geordie Tyke

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Dialects

English in the UK = around 45 dialects

NORTH: LancashireCumbrian

Geordie TykeMIDDLE: Scouse

Brummie

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Dialects

English in the UK = around 45 dialects

NORTH: LancashireCumbrian

Geordie TykeMIDDLE: Scouse

BrummieSOUTH: Cockney

RP

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Dialects

English in the UK = around 45 dialects

NORTH: LancashireCumbrian

Geordie TykeMIDDLE: Scouse

BrummieSOUTH: Cockney

Received Pronunciation ('BBC English')

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Dialects

English in the UK = around 45 dialects

NORTH: LancashireCumbria

Geordie TykeMIDDLE: Scouse

BrummieSOUTH: Cockney

Received Pronunciation ('BBC English')

STANDARD:Writing

Education...

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Dialects

English in the UK = around 45 dialects

NORTH: LancashireCumbria

Geordie TykeMIDDLE: Scouse

BrummieSOUTH: Cockney

Received Pronunciation ('BBC English')

STANDARD:Different,Not Better

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WesternEurope

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English

Spanish

Portuguese

French

Dutch

DanishIcelandic

Italian

German

WesternEurope

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English

Spanish

Portuguese

French

Dutch

DanishIcelandic

Italian

German

WesternEurope

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Other languages

In Europe: 150 languages

How many in the world? ?

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Other languages

In Europe: 150 languages

How many in the world?

Currently spoken 7000+ languages

In Europe around 2% only

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63

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Languages

Languages:

Currently spoken: 7,000

Extinct (known): 500 ?

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Languages

Languages:

Currently spoken: 7,000

Extinct (known): 500 Latin, Etruscan, Hittite, Babylonian, Old Egyptian, …

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Languages

Languages:

Currently spoken: 7,000

Extinct (known): 500 Latin, Etruscan, Hittite, Babylonian, Old Egyptian, …

1 more every 2 weeks

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68Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

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69Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited (language families):

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70Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited:

Germanic: English Dutch German

cow koe Kuh

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71Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited:

Germanic: English Dutch German

cow koe Kuh

Romance: French Spanish Italian

vache vaca vacca

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72Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited

- Language contact:

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73Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited

- Language contact:

English: pig sheep

porc mutton

French: porc mouton

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74Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited

- Language contact:

English: pig sheep climb

porc mutton ascend

French: porc mouton ascendre

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75Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited

- Language contact:

English: pig sheep climb

porc mutton ascend

French: porc mouton ascendre?

Page 76: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

76Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited

- Language contact

- Chance:

Page 77: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

77Language Typology

Communalities

Reasons for languages to have something in common:

- Inherited

- Language contact

- Chance:

'Shut the door' ~ 'Je t'adore' < = I adore you >

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78Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

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79Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

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80Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

Germanic: English Dutch German

cow koe Kuh

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81Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

Germanic: English Dutch German

cow koe Kuh

Plural cows koeien Kühe

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82Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

English: We went into an antique-shop

Page 83: 1 Language Typology Anna Siewierska & Dik Bakker Lancaster University Variation in Structure: Form and Meaning.

83Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

English: We went into an antique-shop

Turkish: Bir antikaci-dan içeri girdik

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84Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

English: We went into an antique-shop

Turkish: Bir antikaci-dan içeri girdik

An antique-shop into

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85Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

English: We went into an antique-shop

Turkish: Bir antikaci-dan içeri gir

An antique-shop into went

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86Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

English: We went into an antique-shop

Turkish: Bir antikaci-dan içeri girdik

An antique-shop into went-we

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87Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

- Language change:

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88Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

- Language change:

Chaucer (1400):But now, sire, lat me se what shal I seyn

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89Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

- Language change:

Chaucer (1400):But now, sire, lat me se what shal I seyn

2000:But now, sir, let me see what I shall be

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90Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

- Language change:

Chaucer (1400):But now, sire, lat me se what shal I seyn

2000:But now, sir, let me see what I shall be

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91Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

- Language change:

Chaucer (1400):But now, sire, lat me se what shal I seyn

2000:But now, sir, let me see what I shall be

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92Language Typology

Differences

Reasons for languages to be different:

- Other choice for solution common problem

- Language change:

Chaucer (1400):But now, sire, lat me se what shal I seyn (Dutch = syn)

2000:But now, sir, let me see what I shall be (Dutch = zyn)

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93Language Typology

Topics from typology

6 Topics from Typology:

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94Language Typology

Topics from typology

6 Topics from Typology:

- From 'easy' to 'complex'

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95Language Typology

Topics from typology

6 Topics from Typology:

- From 'easy' to 'complex'- Related to each other:

e.g. Word Order ~ Passive ~ Subject

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96Language Typology

Topics from typology

6 Topics from Typology:

- From 'easy' to 'complex'- Related to each other:

e.g. Word Order ~ Passive ~ Subject - First 'What is this in the English language, and what does it?'

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97Language Typology

Topics from typology

6 Topics from Typology:

- From 'easy' to 'complex'- Related to each other:

e.g. Word Order ~ Passive ~ Subject - First 'What is this and what does it?'- Branch out to dialects/languages-in-Britain

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98Language Typology

Topics from typology

6 Topics from Typology:

- From 'easy' to 'complex'- Related to each other:

e.g. Word Order ~ Passive ~ Subject - First 'What is this and what does it?’- Branch out to dialects/languages-in-Britain- Further into Europe

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99Language Typology

Topics from typology

6 Topics from Typology:

- From 'easy' to 'complex'- Related to each other:

e.g. Word Order ~ Passive ~ Subject - First 'What is this and what does it?'- Branch out to dialects/languages-in-Britain- Further into Europe- Rest of the world

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100Language Typology

Topics

T1. ARTICLES

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101Language Typology

Articles

Article: what is it in English?

'We went to see the football match' vs'We went to see a football match'

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102Language Typology

Articles

Article: what is it in English, and what does it?

'We went to see the football match' vs'We went to see a football match'

→ Definite: Hearer supposed to know which one→ Indefinite: Hearer NOT supposed to know which one

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103Language Typology

Articles

Article: what is it in English, and what does it?

'We went to see the football match' vs'We went to see a football match'

→ Definite: Hearer supposed to know which one→ Indefinite: Hearer NOT supposed to know which one

Definite also in case there is only ONE:

The capital of Lancashire is Preston

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About the function:

→ Seems to be important that hearer knows what/which I am talking about, to avoid misunderstandings:

'This is a new player, add her to the story' vs 'I am talking about the one you know, so keep all information about her available'

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About the function:

→ Seems to be important that hearer knows what/which I am talking about, to avoid misunderstandings:

'This is a new player, add her to the story' vs 'I am talking about the one you know, so keep all information about her available'

Would all languages have this device? ?

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About the form: Variation with a language

the [δә] boy the [δI] other one

a [ә] / [eī] boy an [әn] other one

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Local English dialect: Variation across dialects

The same, but possible differences in pronunciation and possibly also use:

Cf. Lancashire dialect:

Oh yes yes they were a primary school (.) Miss Riley she were er (.) er in the [δ] infants you see and then you went up into the [‘] big school

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Scots Gaelic:

am balach = the boy

But:

- balach = a boy

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Conclusion < first version >:

Languages have a definite article, form is different per language,and even per dialect.

Indefinite article may but need not be present in a langage. Absence then means 'indefinite'.

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Conclusion < first version >:

Languages have a definite article, form is different per language,and even per dialect.

Indefinite article may but need not be present in a langage. Absence then means 'indefinite'.

But: based on only 2 languages ...

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English:

the boy

a boy

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English: Dutch:

the boy de jongen

a boy een jongen

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English: Dutch: German:

the boy de jongen der Junge

a boy een jongen ein Junge

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English: Dutch: German:

the boy de jongen der Junge

a boy een jongen ein Junge

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English: Dutch: German:

the boy de jongen der Junge

a boy een jongen ein Junge

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English: Dutch: German:

the boy de jongen der Junge

a boy een jongen ein Junge

Different, but sound more or less the same

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English: Dutch: German:

the boy de jongen der Junge

a boy een jongen ein Junge

Different, but sound more or less the same

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Scots Gaelic:

am balach = the boy

balach = a boy

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Scots Gaelic: Welsh:

am balach = the boy y gwlad = the country

balach = a boy gwledydd = a country

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Scots Gaelic: Welsh:

am balach = the boy y gwlad = the country

balach = a boy gwledydd = a country

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Scots Gaelic: Welsh:

am balach = the boy y gwlad = the country

balach = a boy gwledydd = a country

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Not learned much: coincidence???

NO → family relationship:

English, Dutch, German, Danish, Swedish, ...:

Sisters: GERMANIC languages

Welsh, Scots Gaelic, Irish, Breton, ...:

Sisters: CELTIC languages

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English

Welsh

Dutch

German

WesternEurope2009

Gaelic

English

Danish

Breton

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Year100 BC

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Celtic

Year100 BC

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Celtic Germanic

Year100 BC

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Celtic Germanic

Latin

Year100 BC

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Celtic Germanic

Latin

Year0

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Celtic Germanic

Latin

Year0

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130

Celtic Germanic

Latin

Year400 AD

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Celtic Germanic

Latin

Year400 AD

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Celtic Germanic

Latin

Year900 AD

Scots Gaelic

Irish

Welsh

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133

Celtic Germanic

Latin

Year900 AD

Scots Gaelic

Irish

Welsh

GermanDutch

English

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Celtic Germanic

Romance

Year900 AD

Scots Gaelic

Irish

Welsh

GermanDutch

English

Italian

Spanish

French

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Conclusion < first version >:

Languages have a definite article, form is different per language.

Indefinite article may but need not be present in a langage. Absence then means 'indefinite'.

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ArticlesConclusion < second version >:

Languages have a definite article, form is different per language.

Indefinite article may but need not be present in a langage. Absence then means 'indefinite'.

Looking at languages from the same family does not reveal much more about definiteness since languages tend to inherit the same system from their ancestor language. This is still visible after many hundreds of years.

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ArticlesConclusion < second version >:

Languages have a definite article, form is different per language.

Indefinite article may but need not be present in a langage. Absence then means 'indefinite'.

Looking at languages from the same family does not reveal much more about definiteness since languages tend to inherit the same system from their ancestor language

BUT: only two families out of many hundreds ...

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English (GERM): Spanish (ROM): Gaelic (CELT):

the boy el joven am balach

a boy un joven balach

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English (GERM): Spanish (ROM): Gaelic (CELT):

the boy el joven am balach

a boy un joven balach

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English (GERM): Spanish (ROM): Gaelic (CELT):

the boy el joven am balach

a boy un joven balach

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ArticlesConclusion < = second version NOTHING NEW >:

Languages have a definite article, form is different per language.

Indefinite article may but need not be present in a langage. Absence then means 'indefinite'.

Looking at languages from the same family does not reveal much more about definiteness since languages tend to inherit the same system from their ancestor language

BUT: all these languages in close contact (Western Europe)

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SLAVICLANGUAGES:

Russian

Polish

Czech

Croat

...

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English: Polish:

the boy chłopiec

a boy chłopiec

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English: Polish:

the boy chłopiec

a boy chłopiec

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English: Polish:

the boy chłopiec

a boy chłopiec

N.B. Polish speakerswith English as asecond language

often 'forget' the article

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Conclusion < third version >:

Languages may or may not have a definite article.

If they have a definite article, they may also have anindefinite article.

The system seems to be inherited from the ancestor language, because sister languages tend to have the same system.

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Language Types (OBSERVED):

NO ARTICLES

Polish (SLAV)

ARTICLES

ONLY DEFINITE

Welsh (CELT)

DEFINITE & INDEFINITE

English (GERM)

Spanish (ROM)

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Language Types (OBSERVED):

NO ARTICLES ARTICLES

ONLY DEFINITE DEFINITE & INDEFINITE

Universal Rule (???):

Only indefinite article when also definite

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Language Types (LOGICAL):

NO ARTICLES ARTICLES

ONLY DEFINITE DEFINITE & INDEFINITE

ONLY INDEFINITE

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Universal Rule (???):

Only indefinite article when also definite

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Universal Rule (???):

Only indefinite article when also definite

TEST on more languages:

GERM/CELT/ROM/SLAV: related → European Super Family

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Universal Rule (???):

Only indefinite article when also definite

TEST on more languages:

GERM/CELT/ROM/SLAV: related → European Super Family

Ideally: all languages of the world (7000+): NOT AVAILABLE

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Universal Rule (???):

Only indefinite article when also definite

TEST on more languages:

GERM/CELT/ROM/SLAV: related → European Super Family

Ideally: all languages of the world (7000+): NOT AVAILABLE

Minimally: one language per family (250 – 400) < SAMPLE >

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No articles (188) 44%

Definite and Indefinite article (133)30%

Only Definite article (76) 17% 56%

Only Indefinite article (41) 9%

WALS

N = 438

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English: Gaelic: Turkish Polish:

the boy an balach oğlan chłopiec

a boy balach bir oğlan chłopiec

Counter example to (potential) rule

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Conclusion < fourth version; definitive (???) >:

Slightly more than half of the languages have articles.

More than half of these have both a definite and anindefinite article

Of those that have only one type, twice as many have a definite article than an indefinite one

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Language Types (LOGICAL = OBSERVED):

NO ARTICLES ARTICLES

ONLY DEFINITE DEFINITE & INDEFINITE

ONLY INDEFINITE

Right Sample

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Polish: English: Gaelic: Turkishchłopiec the boy am balach oğlanchłopiec a boy balach bir oğlan

44% > 30% > 17% > 9%

Articles NOT necessary: often clear in context

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Polish: English: Gaelic: Turkishchłopiec the boy am balach oğlanchłopiec a boy balach bir oğlan

44% > 30% > 17% > 9%

Articles NOT necessary: often clear in context

Alternatives: Demonstrative (THIS, THAT)Numeral (ONE)Possessive (MY, HIS) Adjctive (NEW, OTHER, CLOSE, BIG)

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Polish: English: Gaelic: Turkishchłopiec the boy am balach oğlanchłopiec a boy balach bir oğlan

44% > 30% > 17% > 9%

Articles NOT necessary: often clear in context

Alternatives: Demonstrative (THIS, THAT)Numeral (ONE)

Historical Source

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Polish: English: Gaelic: Turkishchłopiec the boy am balach oğlanchłopiec a boy balach bir oğlan

44% > 30% = 2x 17% = 2x 9%

If present, why this distribution?

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Polish: English: Gaelic: Turkishchłopiec the boy am balach oğlanchłopiec a boy balach bir oğlan

44% > 30% = 2x 17% = 2x 9%

If present, why this distribution?

Two different forms clearer contrast than one vs noneMost important: difference → one is enough → economicalDefinite article more often stressed than indefinite

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Articles help to identify a referent (known to hearer or not)

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Articles help to identify a referent (known to hearer or not)

Two main types: languages with (I) and without articles (II) almost equally common ( = not a universal category)

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Articles help to identify a referent (known to hearer or not)

Two main types: languages with (I) and without articles (II) almost equally common ( = not a universal category)

Three subtypes of (I):a. both finite and indefinite article presentb. only definite articlec. only indefinite article

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T2. WORD ORDER

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Word Order

Possibilities:

1. Alternative orders in the noun phrase, including constraints on combinations (DefN, IndefN, DemN, NumN, AN)

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Demonstrative – Noun Order

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Numeral – Noun Order

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Word Order

Possibilities:

1. Alternative orders in the noun phrase, including constraints on combinations (DefN, IndefN, DemN, NumN, AN)

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Possibilities:

1. Alternative orders in the noun phrase, including constraints on combinations (DefN, IndefN, DemN, NumN, AN)

2. Main clause order (S / O / V):- simple definition of subject and object - variation in English & dialects- orders in other languages- basic order vs alternatives plus motivation

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Main Clause Order

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Topics

T3. NEGATION

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T4. PASSIVE

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T5. PRONOMINAL SUBJECTS

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T6. SUBJECTS VS OBJECTS

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C. CONCLUDING LESSON

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Conclusion

Resume over all topics, relating them to each other

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Conclusion

Resume over all topics, relating them to each other

On the basis of the original statements:

- Languages are (very) different on the outside

- When you look a bit better, they have a lot in common

- They make choices from restricted options for largely the same categories

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Conclusion

Resume over all topics, relating them to each other

On the basis of the original statements:

- Languages are (very) different on the outside

- When you look a bit better, they have a lot in common

- They make choices from restricted options for largely the same categories

- What would be another interesting topic to look at??

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Topics

Version 2: Compact

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Compact

One 2 - 3 hour version, possibly 2 - 3 x 1 hour:

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184Language Typology

Compact

One 2 - 3 hour version

1. What is typology?

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Compact

One 2 - 3 hour version

1. What is typology?

2. Languages of the world: areas and families

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Compact

One 2 - 3 hour version

1. What is typology?

2. Languages of the world: areas and families

3. One or more (simple) phenomena (Article? Word Order?)

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Compact

One 2 - 3 hour version

1. What is typology?

2. Languages of the world: areas and families

3. One or more (simple) phenomena (Article? Word Order?)

4. Relations between phenomena (only examples)

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Compact

One 2 - 3 hour version

1. What is typology?

2. Languages of the world: areas and families

3. One or more (simple) phenomena (Article? Word Order?)

4. Relations between phenomena (only examples)

5. Conclusion

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Compact

One 2 - 3 hour version

1. What is typology?

2. areas and families

3. One (simple) phenomenon

4. Relations

5. Conclusion

Very Compact Version

Probably better to make it into

“General introduction toLanguages of the World”

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?