Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis

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adam_text Contents Introduction — A bio bibliographical note 15 Chapter 1: What the use of language can achieve for two individuals and how the Speakers utterances are built up 1 1 Choice of the text to be analysed: Scene III/8 of the play Der Schwierige by Hugo von Hofmannsthal 32 1 2 Situation of the two partners at the beginning of their dialogue 33 1.3 Analysis of the decisive part of the dialogue — the goals aimed at by the participants and the basic forms of using speech 34 1 3.1 Exchanges 1 4: Helen clarifies her position towards Hans Karl; the basic forms of call by name and statement 34 1.3.2 Exchanges 5 12: Hans Karl tries to find out what has happened ; the basic forms of yes no question wh question request 37 1 3.3 Exchanges 13 16: Helen s coat as a piece of evidence for her resolution; negation of the opposite instead of a simple positive statement 40 1.3.4 Exchanges 17 33: Hans Karl should explain his return and tries to, partly helped and partly disrurbed by the reactions of Helen 41 1 3.5 Exchanges 34 50: Helen, disturbed for a moment, does not give up, she presents to Hans Karl her own view why he returned and he accepts 44 1 3.6 Exchanges 51 66: Helen reveals what she would have done for Hans Karl and succeeds in giving him confidence in himself and in their love 47 1 4 Summary: the objectives aimed at by language use in general and the five basic ways to achieve them 49 1 5 A look at pragmatics: the five basic ways and the different Special objectives, Special effects aimed at by the use of language 50 1 6 A look at grammar: the units sentences and clauses — inner Organisation of clauses, the notion verbal Semanteme — different conceptual levels, dominant parts and content parts 52 1.6.1 Various grammatical concepts and terminologies indifferent linguistic schools 52 5 Contents 1.6.2 Sentences ( Sätze ) and clauses ( Propositionen ) 52 1.6.3 A first look at the inner Organisation of the verbal clauses: an organising center and different slots in it and around it 53 1.6.4 Running analysis of the clauses in the utterances 1 12; the notions verbal semanteme and dominant parts versus content parts 54 1.6.5 General results of the analyses presented here 59 Chapter 2: What are words? Results of experiences and means to cope with new ex periences — Spoken and written word form — Degrees of definiteness of the meaning sides — Words as mere components in higher syntactic units 2.1 Textchoice 61 2.2 Notes drawn and notes in words, a first interpretation 61 2.3 Drawings as primary creations — texts in words as mediated creations 65 2.4 Linguistic terms for words in the mind words in the acts of use : Saussure langue parole , Chomsky competence Performance 66 2.5 The meaning sides of the words and the two kinds of word forms: spoken words and written words different inteirelations 67 2.6 Different degrees of definiteness of the meaning sides of the words 72 2.7 More on grammar: words as components in syntactic combinations below the level of the verbal clauses formal and semantic patterns 77 2.7.1 General remarks on the interrelations of lexicon and grammar, over and above the Organisation in clauses 77 2.7.2 Plural versus Singular, think of more than one of the units named 78 2.7.3 Indicating Urne and space by naming fixed points and the distances to them, using numbers, countable nouns and prepositions 78 2.7.4 Special characteristics of something signalled by combining the respective nouns with adjectives developing higher meaning sides 79 2.7.5 Presenting something as already known, individually, or as to be selected arbitrarily from the whole class named here 79 2.7.6 Higher meaning sides formed by combining two or more nouns — different semantic relations based on the same morphosyntactic structures 80 2.7.7 The Special semantic relation something/somebody belongs to somebody/something eise ; outlook on general possibilities 81 2.7.8 Special intensity of something which can exist in different degrees, different intensities — intensifiers or grading parts 82 2.8 Summary: words are results of categorising experiences; we use them to form texts with ever new categorising of what we will say 83 Contents CHAPTER3: Creation of words in modern times — Learning new words at adult age — How children learn to read and to write 3.1 Creation of new words: constitution of the meaning sides — reasons for the choice of a word form, acoustic and written 86 3.1.1 Preliminary remarks 86 3.1.2 An attractive name for a new type of chocolate — word forms and advertising 86 3.1.3 Names for a new type of motor car produced in two versions, choice of word forms in light of good advertising effects 87 3.1.4 Acts of name giving by group consensus, especially in the natural sciences 88 3.1.5 Acts of individual name giving: newly coined words in natural sciences and medicine 89 3.1.6 Names for political institutions, laws, etc. — entire word groups or long compound words, often with short forms in few capital letters 89 3.1.7 Words as programmes, as challenges to traditional behaviour 90 3.1.8 Some general results: different ways of choosing or developing word forms but always with priority given to meaning sides 90 3.2 Understanding and learning new words at adult age 91 3.2.1 The very existence of languages depends upon uncountable acts of creating words and learning words in their grammatical structures 91 3.2.2 An example of learning words at adult age, in reading a text, that is, in one way communication with a text 92 3.2.3 General results of such detailed descriptions: New words are learned in context, in whole situations, using everything we already know 94 3.3 The presence of foreign languages for all of us in the modern world — multilingualism not as an exception, but as a rule 95 3.4 A look at the ways of systematically learning foreign languages: as much immersion as possible, as much analysis and grammar as useful 96 3.5 The most important step for taking part in modern communication and acquiring a broad language competence: learning to read and write 98 3.6 Five short case studies — very different ways to the same goals, depending upon children s different characters 99 3.6.1 Learning to read looking at a Short poem known by heart 99 3.6.2 Learning to read based on identifying recurring sames , i.e, Single letters in words seen in the environment 100 3.6.3 Learning to read based on an entire fairy tale heard many times and now known by heart 101 3.6.4 Learning to read by studying the words written by others on the drawings one has made 103 3.6.5 Learning to read with Special aids developed by the teacher, on the basis of careful observations made in the course of her reading lessons 104 I ~ Contents 3.7 Some general conclusions, recommendations for parents and teachers in kindergarten and the first years of primary school 105 3.8 A brief look at the development of writing skills — how far is correct spelling indispensable for a text? 106 CHAPTER4: Origin and growth of language competence in early childhood, from first non verbal communication to sequences of fully organised fmite clauses 4.1 Language development in children is the precondition for the life of this language and it begins at the very first days of each child 108 4.2 Initial communication between the child and his contact persons: recognising faces, voices, tones , gestures, sentence melodies 109 4.3 The children s exploring the use of their own Speech organs, from crying to the production of various single sounds, often in entire dialogues HO 4.4 On the way to acquiring words: forming notions as fixed points in the Performance of actions , becoming meaning sides of words, or not .. 112 4.5 What can we know about the meaning units with sound shapes in the mind of children before a child uses them in his/her own speech? ..113 4.6 From the silent use of an already created competence to its use in spoken texts mostly with words in simplified phonetic form 115 4.7 To what extent the meaning sides created by children themselves are sufficiently congruous with those in adult language? 119 4.8 The progress of a child from uttering first one word sentences to fully developed verbal clauses; pragmatics semantics morphosyntax 122 4.9 Language development in the two younger children of the same family — partially different sequences of individual Steps, but equivalent results .... 127 4.10 Instead of a summary: an attempt to give an overall picture, generalising what became evident in the examples of the three children ..135 4.10.1 The primary importance of the pragmatic aspect — look at the wide ränge of different objectives to be attained by producing sentences 135 4.10.2 Early use of verbs, in different forms: infmitive past participle ordinary finite forms imperative; present tense and perfect 136 4.10.3 Early use of dominant parts to express the State of mind of an individual or to signal the Performance of speech acts 139 4.10.4 Early use of complete verbal semantemes: we must distinguish between semantic patteras and requirements for morphosyntactic correctness 140 4.10.5 Wide ränge of the silent storing of language units and patterns and for one s own speech: Imitation Variation analogy creativity 141 Contents Chapter5: Crucial for understanding: reference, to a world or inside the text — Irony and other rhetorical figures — Metaphors, utilising existing words for new meaning sides — Motivated word forms 5.1 Texts are offers to create inner, intellectual emotional pictures and relations, to be referred to persons, things, etc., existing in a world .... 143 5.2 Infernal reference in the course of the text, mostly to something said in a preceding part, sometimes to something which is to be expected 145 5.3 To what extent does it make sense to isolate the reference of this or that Single word? A plea for an enlarged concept of reference referring 146 5.4 Reference, seen as a general strategy, as the bridge from the world of the speaker/writer to our own worlds in hearing or reading texts 147 5.5 Looking for possible references between word forms, in order to identify and understand new, so far unknown words 148 5.6 Irony, Understatement, exaggeration: Choosing words too strong or too weak, assuming that this will be understood as it is meant 149 5.7 Figurative speech as a means to produce poetic effects — no clear cut boundaries between metaphors and ordinary words 150 5.8 Figurative speech in everyday language: the use of sayings, distinguish ing intended meanings and literal meanings 151 5.9 A borderline case of figurative use: utilising existing word forms to serve for new meanings — thus creating new words apart from the existing ones 152 5.10 Consequences of this way to create new words for the understanding of these words in the texts 155 5.11 Word forms connected with more than one meaning side as a source forjokes, puns, plays of words 155 5.12 Word forms offering aids for storing and retrieving, motivated word forms versus arbitrary ones — psycholinguistic aspects 156 5.12.1 Simple word forms, quite arbitrary — word forms containing components which can be used as semantic hints , as memory aids 156 5.12.2 Limits of predictability — the share of arbitrariness not only in simple words , but also in derivatives and compounds 158 5.12.3 General results: no regulär predictability, but often an aid for learning and storing the words used differently by differem individuals 160 5.12.4 The number of motivated word forms and of purely arbitrary ones in some texts and the amount of help givenor not given by such forms 160 5.13 Conscious analysis non conscious processes of organising and continually reorganising the stock of words in the brain 162 9 Contents 5.14 Folk etymology an example of semantisation of a word form by achildatthe ageof three 164 Charter 6: Grammar I — Grammar as a System which permits to produce regulär variants of words and to combine word forms to clauses with predictable global meaning 6.1 Grammar as a means to construct combinations of words, in clauses and whole sequences of clauses, with practically predictable global meaning . 165 6.2 Grammar as a help to produce variants of words with predictable meaning sides — grammatical irregularities as an obstacle to fluent use .. 165 6.3 Grammar as a super system which includes and combines several cooperating, but heterogeneous Subsystems 166 6.4 How many word classes — how to identify a given word as a member of this or that class? 168 6.5 The Subsystem conjugation , verbs and entire combinations of verbal parts, in German and in English 169 6.5.1 The simple finite forms for the three personae in singular and plural: from the point of view of semantics in most cases redundant 169 6.5.2 The three non finite forms, in German and in English — striking parallelism of forms, but very different frequency and different use .... 171 6.5.3 The simple finite forms for present and past and for the subjunctive 171 6.5.4 Different combinations of finite forms with non finite ones — a look at the Systems of the tenses in the two languages 173 6.5.5 Outside the System of the tenses: the imperative, as a Special variant for requests 175 6.5.6 The passive voice 176 6.5.7 The most universal variant in the English verb System: the present participle or gerund a look at its different uses 176 6.5.8 The conjugation as an open Subsystem: free combining of a finite verb or an adjective or a noun with an infinitive introduced by to 177 6.6 The Subsystem declension , for pronouns and nouns, in German also for adjectives — similarities and differences between German and English 178 6.7 Two kinds of noun phrases: pronoun + adjective + noun, German Begleitgefüge — two nouns, etc., combined, German Anschlußgefüge .. 181 6.8 The Subsystem comparison/gradation/intensification , the use of mere combinations of invariable words 183 6.9 The verbless clauses as elementary expressions — the verbal clauses as descriptions, being more or less detailed 184 in Contents 6.10 The verbal semantemes as semantic framework to put in quite different components — frora a small pronoun to a füll verbal clause 186 6.11 Different morphosyntactic requirements in the filling of similar or identical slots in the semantemes in German and English 190 6.12 What degree of formal grammatical correctness is needed to make oneself understood and to be accepted as a competent Speaker? 192 6.13 Requirements and options for the positions of the verbal parts and the slots for Satzglieder in the verbal clauses in German 193 6.14 Positions of the verbal parts, the subjects and the other non verbal components in English 196 6.15 A Summary for the clauses as units and the need of a Special study of the entire complexes of clauses, the fleld of the complex sentences 198 CHAPTER 7: Grammar II — Complex sentences, morphosyntactic structures and semantic relations in higher units of speaking, embedding of the text as a whole and of each of its parts in a pragmatic context 7.1 Different morphosyntactic structures: coordination and Subordination, coordinated clauses and pairs of main clause and subordinate clause 199 7.2 The word order in the main and the subordinate clauses: in English very similar, in German quite different 200 7.3 Extending the ränge of a verbal Semanteme by filling one or more slots not with noun phrases but with complete verbal clauses 201 7.3.1 Subordinate (relative) clauses filling the slots subject and subject complement in the semantemes with be/sein 201 7.3.2 Relative clauses filling the slots object complement in quite different semantemes 202 7.3.3 Defining and non defining relative clauses 202 7.3.4 Sentences containing non finite clauses the exact semantic relations to be found out by the listeners/readers themselves 203 7.4 A set of general semantic relations signalled primarily by combining two verbal clauses, secondarily by Special filling of an additional slot 203 7.4.1 Preliminary remarks 203 7.4.2 Time and condition, purpose 204 7.4.3 Cause, reason, wanted effects, unexpected effects, concessions, realisation in spite of obstacles 205 7.4.4 Sameness and difference , identity, sünilarity, same or different intensity, measures of difference 206 11 Contents 7.5 The most frequent semantic relations: presenting facts, thoughts, etc., on different conceptual levels, dominant parts and content parts 207 7.6 A Special case: clauses containing negations of different type, independent and in pairs of main clause and subordinate clause 210 7.7 A look at the frequency and distribution of the formal possibilities and the semantic relations between clauses in complex sentences 211 7.7.1 Preliminary remarks, choice of the units to be looked at and counted 211 7.7.2 Analysis and categorising for the exchanges 13 40, with running coramentary ... 212 7.7.3 Results and discussion, part 1: semantic relations, between dominant parts and content parts and on the same conceptual level 217 7.7.4 Results and discussion, part 2: different presentation in units of speaking, Single clauses and pairs of clauses 219 7.7.5 Results and discussion, part 3: different completeness of the clauses importance of repeated acts of reference 219 7.7.6 Conclusions: crucial part of the general strategy reference , both to previous parts in the text and to the entire pragmatic context 220 7.8 Grammar and words — some concluding remarks 221 Chapter 8: How old are our words, meaning sides and word forms, and our grammatical categories and patterns? Great changes and yet very often remarkable stability 8.1 Recognising the age of a word by looking for occurrences in older texts of this language word forms and meaning sides together 223 8.2 Changes in the word forms without becoming another word no corresponding changes in the meaning sides 224 8.3 Changes in the meaning sides are mostly quite independent from changes in the word forms 225 8.4 Going deeper into the past by comparing old words of one language with correspondent words in other (still older) languages 227 8.5 Reconstructing, on the basis of such comparisons, a common preceding language , called Indogermanisch or Indo European 228 8.6 Should we assume strict sound laws or rather casual modifications of the linguistic behaviour under different influences ? 229 8.7 Words of quite different age and different origin side by side in the same text 229 8.8 A glimpse at the history (and pre history) of our grammatical categories and patterns 232 12 Contents 8.8.1 The Situation of today and different possible views on the age of the different Subsystems 232 8.8.2 A text showing partly complete verbal clauses and partly primitive clauses consisting only of nouns and invariable words 233 8.8.3 A glimpse at the grammar of ancient Greek: a comparable System, but much more mutual penetration of the verbal and the nominal Subsystem 235 8.8.4 The cases, in these old times already, were used to fill the slots in the verbal semantemes — these slots being decisive for their understanding 238 8.8.5 Often used in all periods: the two kinds of noun phrases, noun with pronoun and/or adjective and mainpart + connected part 239 8.8.6 The other categories in declension: from three numbers to only two — from animate versus inanimate to masculine feminine neuter 239 8.8.7 At the very beginning there were presumably invariable words only and such words are still of crucial importance in the languages of today 241 8.8.8 In the field comparison, gradation : in the ancient IE languages side by side invariable words and the use of cases 242 8.8.9 Summary: no real proof, but high probability that conjugation is the newest Subsystem, declension an older one, invariable words the oldest 244 8.9 Great changes over great times but also remarkable stability, especially over the lifetime of each Single language user 245 8.10 To what extent are we able to recognise the reasons for the creation of just these categories and patterns and just these acts of changing them? .. 246 Charter 9: Truth or lack of truth in texts — How to decide whether true or not — Fiction as a macro class of texts, appropriate use of fictional texts 9.1 From grammar, history and pre history back to the problems of understanding ingeneral and to pragmatics 248 9.2 Tratn values of correctly formed sentences in logical Systems — quite different criteria of truth in texts in natural languages 248 9.3 Decisions true or not true , so often needed: to what extent are they possible at all? 249 9.4 Why is it often so difficult to teil the truth , even with the best intentions to do so? Actual observations mere reconstructions? 250 9.5 Two principles to obtain relative truth : the principle of plurality of judging persons and the principle of coherence 251 9.6 Fiction versus non fiction: a Special class of texts, with Special kinds of reference and Special relations to true or not true 253 9.7 Facts in works of fiction elements of fiction in presenting indubitable, carefully investigated facts 254 13 Contents 9.8 The existence of a class texts of fiction is by no means natural , it is aproduct of societies of advanced civilisation 255 9.9 Truth, invention, lie, conscious fiction in the mental and linguistic development of children and in general 256 9.10 Be it fiction, be it non fiction: what matters is the appropriate use, a conscious use, in füll awareness of the situations 260 CONCLUDING CHAPTER: Ideal language and real language as seen by an author of fictional texts 1 The text: Das Glasperlenspiel {The Glass Bead Game) by Hermann Hesse .. 262 2 The glass bead game as an ideal language 263 3 Constitution of this language: langue and parole 263 4 The achievements of an ideal language for its users 265 5 Limitations of this ideal language 266 6 Accepting and using language and transcending language: the human existence 268 Subject Index 269 Words looked at in some detail 279 Bibliography 282 14
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spellingShingle Glinz, Hans 1913-2008
Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis
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Sociolinguistics
Sprachtheorie (DE-588)4121708-1 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4121708-1
title Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis
title_auth Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis
title_exact_search Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis
title_full Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis Hans Glinz. Transl. of the first three chapters and organisation of the publ.: Kurt R. Jankowsky
title_fullStr Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis Hans Glinz. Transl. of the first three chapters and organisation of the publ.: Kurt R. Jankowsky
title_full_unstemmed Languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis Hans Glinz. Transl. of the first three chapters and organisation of the publ.: Kurt R. Jankowsky
title_short Languages and their use in our life as human beings
title_sort languages and their use in our life as human beings a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis
title_sub a theory of speech and language on a saussurean basis
topic Sprache
Language and languages
Sociolinguistics
Sprachtheorie (DE-588)4121708-1 gnd
topic_facet Sprache
Language and languages
Sociolinguistics
Sprachtheorie
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