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Popular ideas language
1. POPULAR IDEAS ABOUT LANGUAGE
John Fry
San Jos´ State University
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Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU
2. Popular ideas about language: five themes
1. The prescriptive tradition: It is me or It is I ?
2. Language purity and decay
3. Primitive languages and languages of excellence
4. The function or purpose of language
5. Language and thought
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 1
3. The prescriptive tradition
• Prescriptivists tell you how to use your language correctly
• Examples of prescriptive grammar rules in English:
1. You should say It is I, not It is me, because the verb be
should be followed by the nominative case
2. I ain’t got no money is wrong, because ain’t is not a word,
and two negatives make a positive
• Some countries establish prestigious Academies to protect
their language and maintain prescriptive standards
– Italy: Accademia della Crusca, 1582
– France: Acad´mie fran¸aise, 1635
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Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 2
4. Language deterioration and decay
• It is widely held that language is decaying or deteriorating
• Once source of decay is failure to obey prescriptive rules
Language is today so quickly transformed that it has become
decayed and rotten. Ineptitude and sluggishness, bombast,
foppery and grammatical errors are increasing. – Gustav
Wustmann, Allerhand Sprachdummheiten, 1891
• Another cause of decay is pollution from foreign words
– In August 2000 the Polish Language Council outlawed
commercial use of the words supermarket, club, and plaza
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 3
5. Complaints about new words in English
• In 1867 Edward S. Gould complained about ‘spurious words’
like demean, jeopardize, leniency, and underhanded
• In 1710, Jonathan Swift lamented “the continual Corruption
of our English Toungue,” including contractions like he’s
• William Caxton on the new word ‘eggys’ (1490):
Sheffelde, a mercer, cam in to an hows and axed for mete,
and specyally he axyd after ‘eggys’. And the good wyf
answerede that she coude speke no Frenshe. And the
marchaunt was angry, for he also coude speke no Frenshe,
but wold have hadde egges, and she understode hym not.
And thenne at last a nother sayd that he wolde have
‘eyren’. Then the good wyf sayd that she understod hym
wel. . . Certaynly, it is harde to playse every man by cause
of dyversite & chaunge of langage.
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 4
6. Language decay or language change?
• When we examine language change objectively, we see that it
is inevitable—all languages are slowly but constantly changing,
whether we like it or not
• English has changed dramatically over the last millennium
Year The Lord’s Prayer
1000 Fæder ure þu þe eart on heofonum;
Si þin nama gehalgod
1384 Oure fadir þat art in heuenes
halwid be þi name
1559 Our Father which art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 5
7. Descriptive vs. prescriptive linguistics
• In order to study human language objectively, we will adopt a
descriptive rather than a prescriptive approach
• Descriptive approach: describe and explain the (subconscious)
rules that languages obey
– This is the domain of phonology, morphology, and syntax
• Prescriptive approach: tell people how to speak properly by
giving them rules to obey
– “Avoid double negatives like ain’t got no”
– “Don’t end a sentence with a preposition”
– “Don’t split infinitives (e.g. to boldly go)”
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 6
8. Should I say It is me or It is I?
• Prescriptivists prefer It is I, claiming the verb be should be
followed by nominative, not accusative case
• This rule (be+nominative) comes from Latin, a language of
great prestige in European education
• Descriptivists note the following facts
– The Latin rule is not universal
∗ In Arabic, be is followed by the accusative
∗ In French, only moi is possible (c’est moi)
– In English, It’s me is the norm; It is I sounds very formal
• There is no objective scientific reason to prefer It is I in
English (although there are social reasons)
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 7
9. What about I ain’t got no money?
• Prescriptivists say this sentence is incorrect because it violates
the principles of logic, where two negatives make a positive
• Descriptivists note the following facts
– Many languages ‘violate logic’ with double negatives:
∗ Russian: Ya nichevo ne znayu (‘I don’t know nothing’)
∗ Old English: He nevere yet no vileynye ne sayde
– Under this phenomenon, called negative concord, two
negatives make an emphatic negative, not a positive
– Several dialects of English exhibit negative concord
• There is no objective scientific reason to disprefer I ain’t got
no money (although there are social reasons)
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 8
10. How descriptive linguists view prescriptivism
• To a descriptive linguist, language is not a cultural artifact,
but rather a biological (genetic) endowment of homo sapiens
– Birds fly, spiders spin webs, humans talk
Imagine that you are watching a nature documentary. The
video shows the usual gorgeous footage of animals in their
natural habitats. But the voiceover reports some troubling
facts. Dolphins do not execute their swimming strokes
properly. White-crowned sparrows carelessly debase their
calls. Chickadees’ nests are incorrectly constructed, pandas
hold bamboo in the wrong paw, the song of the humpback
whale contains several well-known errors, and monkeys’ cries
have been in a state of chaos and degeneration for hundreds
of years. (Steven Pinker, The Language Instinct)
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 9
11. Descriptive vs. prescriptive linguistics: summary
• Modern linguistics adopts a descriptive approach: describe
and explain the (subconscious) rules that languages obey
• Prescriptive rules about language use are not part of linguistics
• That doesn’t mean that prescriptive rules aren’t important for
other reasons! For example:
– Prescriptive standards, especially in writing, help facilitate
communication
– People who don’t learn prescriptive rules are discriminated
against socially (finding jobs, etc.)
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 10
12. Primitive vs. superior languages
• Before the 20th century it was commonly believed that certain
primitive cultures spoke primitive languages with no grammar,
a few sounds, and a small vocabulary
• Sometimes primitive languages were seen as corruptions of
these earlier, nobler languages
But what does their language on close inspection prove? In
every case what they are themselves, the remnant and ruin
of a better and nobler past. Fearful indeed is the impress
of degradation which is stamped on the language of the
savage. – R. Trench, Archbishop of Dublin, 1851
• At the other end of the scale, particular languages (usually
classical Arabic, Greek, Latin, or Sanskrit) are popularly held
up as models of beauty, grace, clarity, or logic
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 11
13. The linguist’s perspective: no superior languages
• No primitive languages have been discovered
• All known languages have a complex grammar
– Simplicity in one area (e.g. word endings) is always balanced
by complexity in another area (e.g. word order)
• Cultural or economic development does not seem to correlate
with, say, the number of vowel sounds a language has:
Vowels Example languages
5 or fewer Hawaiian, Hebrew, Japanese, Navajo, Spanish
12 or more Bambara, English, French, Wolof, !X˜
u
• There is no objective measure for evaluating a particular
language in aesthetic, philosophical, literary, religious, or
cultural terms, so linguists don’t bother
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14. The many functions of language
• What is the function or purpose of language?
• The popular view of the function of language:
– Communication of information
• However, language seems to have many other uses too:
– Personal expression (art, feelings, emotion)
– Social interaction (hello, bless you)
– Rhythmic sounds (chants, songs, games, poetry)
– Changing reality (prayer, baptisms)
– Recording facts (records, accounts)
– Instrument of thought (verbal thinking, inner speech)
– Expression of identity
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15. Language and thought
• The relationship between language and thought is a difficult
question faced by linguists, psychologists, and philosophers
• Many kinds of thinking are nonverbal (e.g., spatial, physical,
emotional, musical), so clearly language and thought are not
the same thing
• Three possible relations between language and thought:
1. Language depends on thought (we translate from thought
into language)
2. Thought depends on language (Sapir-Whorf hypothesis)
3. Language and thought are interdependent (both 1 and 2)
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16. Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
• The American linguist Edward Sapir (1884-1939) and his
pupil Benjamin Lee Whorf (1897–1941) are associated with
the hypothesis that thought depends on language
• The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis combines two principles:
1. Linguistic determinism: language determines how we think
2. Linguistic relativity: distinctions encoded in one language
are not found in other languages
• Whorf wrote:
We dissect nature along lines laid down by our native
languages. . . We cut nature up, organize it into concepts,
and ascribe significances as we do, largely because we are
parties to an agreement to organize it in this way—an
agreement that holds throughout our speech community
and is codified in the patterns of our language.
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17. Popular ideas about linguistic determinism
• It is often claimed that because a language lacks a word, its
speakers cannot grasp the concept
– I’ve been told that in the Russian language there isn’t even
a word for freedom – Ronald Reagan
– There’s not a word in any African language which describes
homosexual – Professor Griff, Public Enemy
• Other examples
– “Hopi has no words for time”
– “Eskimo has hundreds of words for snow”
– Language L has no word for
∗ compromise
∗ privacy
∗ sportsmanship
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 16
18. ‘Language L has no word for W ’
• The idea that because a language lacks a word its speakers
cannot grasp the concept is clearly false, although one
language may take many words to say what another language
says in a single word
Pintupi English
yarla a hole in an object
pirti a hole in the ground
pirnki a hole formed by a rock shelf
kartalpa a small hole in the ground
yulpilpa a shallow hole in which ants live
mutara a special hole in a spear
nyarrkalpa a burrow for small animals
pulpa a rabbit burrow
makarnpa a goanna burrow
katarta the hole left by a goanna when it has broken
the surface after hibernation
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 17
19. Evaluating linguistic relativity and determinism
• It is obviously true that languages encode distinctions that are
not found in other languages
• But the idea that language determines thought (linguistic
determinism) is clearly false
– Translation between languages is possible, and the
distinctions of one language can be described in another
• The idea that language influences thought is plausible
– This is the subject of ongoing psychological experiments
(with conflicting results)
• In sum, it appears that language and thought are mutually
interdependent, but the exact relationship is unclear
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20. Popular views of language: summary
• We examined popular views of language in five areas
1. The prescriptive tradition
2. Language purity and decay
3. Primitive languages and languages of excellence
4. The function or purpose of language
5. Language and thought
• Linguistics tries to approach language objectively and
scientifically, rather than simply accepting popular opinions
and beliefs about language
• Our approach to grammar is descriptive: we try to describe
and explain the (subconscious) rules that languages obey
– This is the domain of phonology, morphology, and syntax
Linguistics 101: Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2005, SJSU 19