新编语言学教程

新编语言学教程
作 者: 刘润清 文旭
出版社: 外语教学与研究出版社
丛编项: 高等学校英语专业系列教材
版权说明: 本书为出版图书,暂不支持在线阅读,请支持正版图书
标 签: 语言学 高等学校 教材 英文
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作者简介

暂缺《新编语言学教程》作者简介

内容简介

“高等学校英语专业系列教材”是一套为英语专业高年级本科生和研究生编写的教材,包括高级英语语言技能、英语专业知识和相关专业知识三个方面。本系列教材为开放式,涵盖面广,设计科学,注重时代性、知识性与实用性,有助于学习者在掌握英语技能的基础上进一步扩充知识领域,培养应用能力,提高综合素养。 《新编语言学教程》针对高等学校英语专业高年级学生编写,系统介绍语言学基本理论和概念,既可为英语专业语言学导论课教材,也可供报考语言学硕士的学生和其他英语工作者使用。 本教材以《高等学校英语专业英语教学大纲》为基本依据,参考借鉴大量国内外同类教材,具有以下主要特点: 内容丰富,重点突出,涵盖语言学领域的核心内容 反映当代语言学的最新理论和研究成果 注重可操作性,讲练结合,便于教授和学习 语言简明生动,深入浅出,富有启发性.

图书目录

Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction

1.1 Linguistics

1.1.1 Definition of linguistics

1.1.2 Linguistics versus traditional grammar

1.1.3 Use of studying linguistics

1.1.4 Scope of linguistics

1.2 Language

1.2.1 Definition of language

1.2.2 Origin of language

1.2.3 Design features of language

1.2.4 Functions of language

1.3 Some Major Concepts in Linguistics

1.3.1 Descriptive and prescriptive grammars

1.3.2 Synchronic and diachronic linguistics

1.3.3 Langue and parole

1.3.4 Competence and performance

1.3.5 Syntagmatic and paradigmatic relations

1.3.6 Functionalism and formalism

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 2 The Sounds of Language

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Phonetics

2.2.1 Articulators and their functions

2.2.2 Voiced and voiceless sounds

2.2.3 Nasal and oral sounds

2.2.4 Classification of English speech sounds

2.2.4.1 English consonants

2.2.4.2 English vowels

2.2.5 Variations of sounds

2.2.5.1 Liaison

2.2.5.2 Elision and assimilation

2.3 Phonology

2.3.1 Phonemes: the phonological units of language

2.3.2 Minimal pairs and sets

2.3.3 Free variation

2.3.4 Distinctive features

2.3.5 Syllables and consonant clusters

2.3.6 Suprasemental features

2.3.6.1 Stress

2.3.6.2 Intonation

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 3 Morphology

3.1 Introduction

3.2 Morphemes

3.2.1 Free morphemes

3.2.2 Bound morphemes

3.3 Morphs and AIIomorphs

3.4 Types of Word Formation

3.4.1 Compounding

3.4.2 Derivation

3.4.3 Other ways of word formation

3.4.3.1 Conversion

3.4.3.2 Backformation

3.4.3.3 Clipping

3.4.3.4 Blending

3.4.3.5 Acronym

3.4.3.6 Initialism

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 4 Syntax

4.1 Introduction

4.2 Word classes

4.3 The Prescriptive Approach

4.4 The Descriptive Approach

4.4.1 Structural analysis

4.4.2 Immediate constituent analysis

4.5 Constituent Structure Grammar

4.6 Transformational Grammar

4.7 Systemic Functional Grammar

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 5 Semantics

5.1 Definition of Semantics

5.2 Approaches to Meaning

5.2.1 Meaning as naming

5.2.2 Meaning as concept

5.2.3 Meaning as behavior

5.2.4 Meaning as context

5.2.5 Meaning as truth conditions

5.3 Word Meaning

5.3.1 Sense and reference

5.3.2 Seven types of meaning

5.3.2.1 Conceptual meaning

5.3.2.2 Connotative meaning

5.3.2.3 Social meaning

5.3.2.4 Affective meaning

5.3.2.5 Reflective meaning

5.3.2.6 Collocative meaning

5.3.2.7 Thematic meaning

5.3.3 Semantic fields

5.3.4 Componential analysis

5.3.5 Semantic relationships between words

5.3.5.1 Homonymy

5.3.5.2 Polysemy

5.3.5.3 Homophony

5.3.5.4 Synonymy

5.3.5.5 Antonymy

5.3.5.6 Hyponymy

5.3.5.7 Meronymy

5.4 Sentence Meaning

5.4.1 Sentence and proposition

5.4.2 Semantic roles

5.4.3 Semantic relationships between sentences

5.4.3.1 Entailment

5.4.3.2 Presupposition

5.4.3.3 Synonymy

5.4.3.4 Inconsistency

5.4.3.5 Implicature

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 6 Pragmatics

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Micropragmatics

6.2.1 Reference

6.2.2 Deixis

6.2.3 Anaphora

6.2.4 Presupposition

6.3 Macropragmatics

6.3.1 Speech act theory

6.3.1.1 Illocutionary acts

6.3.1.2 Classification of illocutionary acts

6.3.1.3 Indirect speech acts

6.3.2 The Cooperative Principle

6.3.2.1 The Cooperative Principle and its maxims

6.3.2.2 Conversational implicatures

6.3.3 The Politeness Principle

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 7 Discourse Analysis

7.1 Discourse and Discourse Analysis

7.2 Information Structure

7.2.1 Given and new information

7.2.2 Topic and comment

7.2.3 Contrast

7.3 Cohesion and Coherence

7.3.1 Cohesion

7.3.1.1 Reference

7.3.1.2 Substitution

7.3.1.3 Ellipsis

7.3.1.4 Conjunction

7.3.1.5 Lexical cohesion

7.3.2 Coherence

7.4 Discourse Markers

7.5 Conversational Analysis

7.5.1 Adjacency pairs

7.5.2 Preference structure

7.5.3 Presequences

7.6 Critical Discourse Analysis

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 8 Sociolinguistics

8.1 Introduction

8.2 Language Varieties

8.2.1 Standard language

8.2.2 Dialects

8.2.3 Registers

8.2.4 Pidgins and creoles

8.2.5 Language planning

8.3 Choosing a Code

8.3.1 Diglossia

8.3.2 Bilingualism and multilingualism

8.3.3 Code-switching

8.4 Linguistic Taboos and Euphemisms

8.5 Language and Gender

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 9 Psycholinguistics

9.1 Introduction

9.2 Language Acquisition

9.3 Language Production

9.3.1 Conceptualization

9.3.2 Formulation

9.3.3 Articulation

9.3.4 Self-regulation

9.4 Language Comprehension

9.4.1 Sound comprehension

9.4.2 Word comprehension

9.4.3 Sentence comprehension

9.4.4 Text comprehension

9.5 Language and Thought

9.5.1 Language determines thought

9.5.2 Thought determines language

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 10 Cognitive Linguistics

10.1 Introduction

10.2 Categorization and Categories

10.2.1 The classical theory

10.2.2 Prototype theory

10.2.3 Levels of categorization

10.3 Conceptual Metaphor and Metonymy

10.3.1 Conceptual metaphor

10.3.2 Conceptual metonymy

10.4 Iconicity

10.4.1 Iconicity of order

10.4.2 Iconicity of distance

10.4.3 Iconicity of complexity

10.5 Grammaticalization

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 11 Language Acquisition

11.1 First Language Acquisition

11.1.1 The behaviorist approach

11.1.2 The innateness approach

11.1.3 Stages of acquiring the first language

11.2 Second Language Acquisition

11.2.1 Contrastive analysis

11.2.2 Error analysis

11.2.3 Interlanguage

11.3 Individual Differences in Second Language Acquisition

11.3.1 Language aptitude

11.3.2 Cognitive style: field dependence and field independence

11.3.3 Personality traits

11.3.4 Learning strategies

11.4 Instruction and L2 Acquisition

11.4.1 Form-focused instruction

11.4.2 Learner-instruction matching

11.4.3 Strategy training

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Chapter 12 Applied Linguistics

12.1 Introduction

12.2 Language Teaching

12.2.1 The grammar-translation method

12.2.2 The direct method

12.2.3 The audiolingual method

12.2.4 Situational language teaching

12.2.5 Functional language teaching

12.2.6 Communicative language teaching

12.2.7 Other approaches

12.3 Testing

12.3.1 The main types of language tests

12.3.2 Principles of language testing

12.4 Summary

Exercises and Discussion Questions

Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading

Supplementary Readings

Glossary

Index