cover of episode 101: Micro to macro - The levels of language

101: Micro to macro - The levels of language

2025/2/21
logo of podcast Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

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Gretchen McCulloch
L
Lauren Gawne
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Lauren Gawne: 我们从语言的最小单位(音素)开始,逐步探讨语言结构的不同层次,包括音系学(音素的组合和模式)、形态学(词素的构成)、句法(词语在句子中的排列)、语义学(词语和句子的意义)、语用学(语言在语境中的使用)以及语篇分析(语言在更大范围内的使用)。我们还讨论了语言习得、历史语言学和社会语言学等跨越多个层次的领域。 我们以三个例句为例,展示了语言结构的不同层次: 1. "Today, I learned that there were small walrus ancestors, and I am extremely happy to report that the researcher writing about this did indeed refer to them as smallrus." 2. "Moons can have moons, and they are called moonmoons." 3. "As the current record holder for the highest score in Donkey Kong, Hank Chen is legally fourth in line to be president of Taiwan." 这些例句涵盖了语音、词素、词语、句子和语篇等多个层次。 Gretchen McCulloch: 许多语言学入门课程都遵循从微观到宏观的结构,从语言的最小单位到语篇进行讲解。但是Lingthusiasm节目并没有按照这个结构组织内容,而是有意混合不同的主题,因为这样更有趣,也更能及时讨论最新的研究成果。我们讨论了国际音标、语音学中的音素组合和模式、形态学中的词素构成和词缀、句法中的词序和句子结构、语义学中的词语意义和句子意义、语用学中的语言在语境中的使用以及语篇分析中的语言在更大范围内的使用。我们还探讨了语言变化、语言习得、社会语言学和语言田野调查等跨学科主题。 我们还讨论了语言的创造性,例如新词的创造(例如"smallrus"和"moonmoons"),以及不同语言在形态学和句法上的差异。

Deep Dive

Chapters
This chapter explores phonetics, the study of speech sounds. It discusses the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), how sounds influence each other, and the concept of phonology.
  • The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is a system for transcribing speech sounds.
  • Phonology studies the rules and patterns of how sounds fit together.
  • Sounds influence each other in how they're produced, creating variations in pronunciation.

Shownotes Transcript

When we first learn about nature, we generally start with the solid mid-sized animals: cats, dogs, elephants, tigers, horses, birds, turtles, and so on. Only later on do we zoom in and out from these charismatic megafauna to the tinier levels, like cells and bacteria, or the larger levels, like ecosystems and the water cycle. With language, words are the easily graspable charismatic megafauna (charismatic megaverba?), from which there are both micro levels (like sounds, handshapes, and morphemes) and macro levels (like sentences, conversations, and narratives).

In this episode, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gretchen McCulloch take advantage of the aptly numbered 101th episode to get enthusiastic about linguistics from the micro to macro perspective often found in Linguistics 101 classes. We start with sounds and handshapes, moving onto accents and sound changes, fitting affixes into words, words into sentences, and sentences into discourse. We also talk about areas of linguistics that involve language at all these levels at once, including historical linguistics, child language acquisition, linguistic fieldwork, sociolinguistics, and psycholinguistics. Plus: why we don't follow this order for Lingthusiasm episodes or Crash Course Linguistics and how you can give yourself a DIY intro linguistics course.

Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice: https://episodes.fm/1186056137/episode/dGFnOnNvdW5kY2xvdWQsMjAxMDp0cmFja3MvMjAzOTAyNTM3Ng Read the transcript here: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/776045991069728768/transcript-episode-101-ling-101

Announcements:

To celebrate Lingthusiasm now having more than 100 episodes, we have compiled a list of 101 places where you can get even more linguistics enthusiasm! This is your one-stop-shop if you want suggestions for other podcasts, books, videos, blogs, and other places online and offline to feed your interest in linguistics. Even with a hundred and one options, we're sure there's still a few that we've missed, so also feel free to tag us @ lingthusiasm on social media about your favourites!

In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about what psycholinguistics can tell us about creative writing, with Julie Sedivy, psycholinguist and the author of Memory Speaks and Linguaphile! We talk about moving from the style of scientific writing to literary writing by writing a lot of unpublished poetry to develop her aesthetic sense, how studying linguistics for a writer is like studying anatomy for a sculptor or colour theory for a painter, and how you could set up an eyetracking study to help writers figure out which sentences make their readers slow down.

Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 90+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds.

For links to things mentioned in this episode: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/776045579375640576/lingthusiasm-episode-101-micro-to-macro-the