3. Finishing Chapter One: system, signs, vocal, conventional, human,
communicate
• How does thought shape language?
• How does language shape thought?
• What is the Whorf hypothesis?
4. Chapter One: What you need to remember
Be able to say something, with examples, about linguistic…
…systems (phonology, lexis, morphosyntax)
…signs
…the vocal (oral-aural) nature of language
…conventional language
…human communication
…Whorf hypothesis
7. Number of living languages: 6912
Number of those languages that are nearly extinct: 516
Language spoken by the greatest number of non-native speakers: English (250 million to 350
million non-native speakers)
Country with the most languages spoken: Papua New Guinea has 820 living languages.
First language ever written: Sumerian or Egyptian (about 3200 BC)
Oldest written language still in existence: Chinese or Greek (about 1500 BC)
Language with the most words: English, approx. 250,000 distinct words
Language with the fewest words: Taki Taki (also called Sranan), 340 words. Taki Taki is an
English-based Creole spoken by 120,000 in the South American country of Suriname.
The most widely published language: English
Language which has won the most Oscars: Italian (12 Academy Awards for Best Foreign Film)
The most translated document: Universal Declaration Of Human Rights, written by the United
Nations in 1948, has been translated into 321 languages and dialects.
Longest word in the English language: pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (45
letters)
8.
9.
10. Consonants: Place of articulation
• Labial
--bilabial
--labiodental
• Dental
--interdental
--alveolar
--alveolopalatal
• Palatovelar
--palatal
--velar
• glottal
12. Place of articulation: LABIAL
bilabial labiodental
Voiceless stop
(plosive)
pup
Voiced stop bub
Voiceless
fricative
(where is the
friction?)
few
Voiced fricative
(where is the
friction?)
view
Nasals
(sound through
nose)
mum
13. Place of articulation: DENTAL
interdental alveolar alveolopalatal
Voiceless stop tat
Voiced stop dad
Voiceless fricative
(where is the friction?)
thigh seal shun
Voiced fricative
(where is the friction?)
Thy, them zeal vision
Voiceless affricative
(begins like t-stop)
chug
Voiced fricative
(begins like d-stop)
jug
Nasals
(sound through nose)
nun
15. Vowels
Front (is the part of the
tongue in the highest
position)
Central Back
High (tongue relative to
roof of mouth)
Pete
pit
pike poo
put
Medium pet
pate
Putt pert sofa Poe
paw
Low pat pot