About This Book
The book presents language as a culturally grounded system of symbolic speech, arguing against purely biological or interjectional origin theories. It treats speech components from sounds and articulatory mechanisms to words and sentence structure, and outlines phonetics, phonology, and grammatical processes such as affixation, mutation, reduplication, and stress. It proposes ways to classify languages by conceptual types and degree of synthesis, and traces historical change through drift, phonetic laws, and analogical leveling. It examines language contact, borrowing, and mutual influence, and discusses relations between language, race, and culture and how linguistic features shape literary style and prosody.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
"Stops", Or How to Punctuate / A Practical Handbook for Writers and Students
by Paul Allardyce
1001 Questions and Answers on Orthography and Reading
by B. A. Hathaway
1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue
by Francis Grose
A Blind Esperantist's Trip to Finland and Sweden, to Attend the Fourteenth International Esperanto Congress
by W. Percy Merrick
A Book About Words
by G. F. Graham
A booke called the Foundacion of Rhetorike / because all other partes of Rhetorike are grounded thereupon, euery parte sette forthe in an Oracion vpon questions, verie profitable to bee knowen and redde
by Richard Rainolde