LINGUISTICS HISTORY
Historical linguistics focuses on language change and how languages are related. The tools of analysis developed by historical linguists enabled scholars to begin classifying the world's languages into related families and branches. Dialectology, the study of dialects, also is of importance to language classification.
History of Linguistic Analysis
  Throughout history individuals have tried to describe their own languages in ways that make the workings of these languages appear more meaningful and orderly. Panini, a 5th-century BC Indian grammarian, described the sounds and construction of sentences of the Sanskrit language in great detail.
  The ancient Greeks and Romans were also curious about their languages and wrote grammatical descriptions, frequently from a philosophical or literary point of view. The writings of two Greek grammarians, Dionysius Thrax in the 2nd century BC and Appollonius Dyscolus in the 2nd century AD, strongly influenced the Roman view of language. The works of Donatus, a 4th-century AD Roman, and the 6th-century Latin grammarian Priscian adapted Greek thinking to the Latin language. They had a profound influence on Western thought about language. Until recent times the grammar of Priscian in particular served as a model for the description of medieval and modern European languages, including English. Such concepts as parts of speech (nouns, verbs, and adverbs) and case (nominative, accusative, genitive) stem from Priscian's work.
  In the late 18th century the English scholar Sir William Jones noticed similarities between Sanskrit, Greek, and Latin. He suggested that the three languages might have developed from a common source. He also discovered that Gothic, Old High German, Old Norse, Old Persian, and Celtic showed similarities to the other three.
  In the early 19th century the scholars Jacob Grimm, a German, and Rasmus Rask, a Dane, noted that a number of consistent sound correspondences existed between Gothic, Latin, and Greek in words with similar meanings. For example, where Gothic had a t sound (taihun, "ten"), Greek, Latin, and Sanskrit had a d sound in the same position (Greek deka, Latin decem, and Sanskrit dasa, all meaning "ten"). This technique of comparing words became known as the comparative method. It was used to show that certain languages are related, like siblings, and to help construct parent languages from which the modern languages could have evolved. Thus English, modern German, Dutch, and the Scandinavian languages were described as having developed from an ancestor called Old Germanic. Old Germanic in turn developed from an even older ancestor called Indo-European.
  In the early 20th century in the United States, a strong interest in discovering and describing native American Indian languages arose. Anthropological linguists analyzed Indian languages in terms that differed radically from those of traditional European grammars. This type of language analysis, known as structural linguistics, was developed by the American linguists Franz Boas, Edward Sapir, Benjamin Lee Whorf, and Leonard Bloomfield, among others. It placed much emphasis on phonetics, phonology, and new grammatical categories, and above all on discovery procedures the techniques needed to discover the significant sounds and units of meaning of a language. In describing languages the structuralists proceeded from smaller to larger units: from the sounds of language to the distinctive sounds (phonemes) and from the smallest units that mean something (morphemes) to phrases.
Modern Linguistics
  In the mid-1950s another United States scholar, Noam Chomsky, looked at language in yet another way. Chomsky tried to explain rather than describe languages. He did this by designing a more mathematically precise model of languages, one that tried to generate or predict all the grammatical sentences and rule out all the ungrammatical ones. This type of linguistics has been called transformational, generative, or transformational-generative grammar.
  As a starting point Chomsky reasoned that a structural approach to the following sentences would show them to have the same structure even though there is a great difference in their meanings.
John is eager to please.
  John is easy to please.
In both of these sentences the part of speech of each word is the same, and the main verb, is,has the same subject, John. But there is another verb in these sentences, to please.In some deep sense John is the subject of to please in the first sentence but the object of to pleasein the second. Chomsky explained the difference in meaning of these sentences by setting up an underlying, or deep, structure and a surface structure. The underlying structure which is the actual meaning of a phrase, or close to it is changed into the surface structure, or what a person really says, by a series of rules called transformations. Thus, in the two examples above, the relation between John and to pleaseis different, but transformations change them both into the same surface structure.
  Chomsky also introduced a distinction between competence and performance. Performance is what a speaker actually says when talking. Competence, on the other hand, is what a person actually knows about a language, possibly an unconscious knowledge. In the area of syntax, competence refers to the ability to recognize both grammatical and ungrammatical word orders. For example, all speakers of English would agree that I am going to the store is grammatical. They would also agree that To store the am going I is not proper English even if they can guess what it means. This knowledge is known as competence. People also have competence to choose between correct and incorrect combinations of sounds.
  One result of looking at languages as basic underlying forms, or ideas, that are changed transformed into phrases that people actually say is that languages appear more similar than they did in structural or traditional grammars. The underlying structures, or meanings, of different languages may be remarkably alike. This emphasizes the possibility of a universal grammar; that is, a grammar that is the same for all human languages. Such an idea is of great interest to psychologists and philosophers.
Linguistics Related to Other Areas
The subject of linguistics overlaps with such other areas as sociology, psychology, and computer science. Sociolinguistics is concerned with the social aspects of language usage; for example, how different dialects and language styles reflect the background of the speaker and his position in society. Topics in psycholinguistics include language processes and the brain; the acquisition of languages by children; aphasia, a condition in which the loss of speech occurs; and perception of speech. Computational linguistics includes the use of computers to quickly translate languages as well as the design of machines to recognize and produce human-sounding speech.
  Recommended for further reading are 'What is Linguistics?' by Suzette Elgin, 2nd ed. (published by Prentice in 1979); 'An Introduction to Language' by Victoria Fromkin and Robert Rodman, 4th ed. (Holt, 1988); and 'The Story of Language' by Mario Pei, rev. ed. (NAL, 1965). (See also Chomsky; Language.)
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