Summary Linguistic Anthropology Chapter 4: Words and Sentences LING 2102
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Course
Linguistic Anthropology (LING2102)
Institution
University Of Winnipeg (U Of W
)
Book
The Anthropology of Language: An Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology
Chapter 4: Words and Sentences Textbook summary for Linguistic Anthropology (LING2102, ANTH2400) at University of Winnipeg, as instructed by Prof. Ivan Roksandic
Chapter 1: Linguistic Anthropology Key Terms
Chapter 1: Linguistic Anthropology Summary (LING2102/ANTH2400)
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University of Winnipeg (U of W
)
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Linguistic Anthropology (LING2102)
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Chapter 4: Words and Sentences
● When we set out to learn a new language, we begin with some words and simple
sentences
● How does anyone learn the complexities of a new language?
○ Classroom lessons give you lots of information in a short time and it is difficult
to remember when you need it
○ It is more useful to group words by likeness and difference and to take them
apart
● Linguistic anthropology can help you learn to analyze words, phrases, and sentences
Morphology
● Morphology: the analysis of words and how they are structures
● Most people think of words as the fundamental units of language but they are not the
smallest units of meaning
● Morpheme: The smallest unit of meaning in a language
● A word can include one or more morphemes
● Finding the morphemes of a language will take your understanding further than
memorizing lists of words
● Dictionary writers assume you already know something about the language
○ It would be inefficient to list every word in all its forms
○ It will give you basic information and assume you know what to do with it
● Thinking in terms of words rather than morphemes slows language learners down
● Examples: The English word HELPER is made of HELP + ER
○ The dictionary is more likely to define the word HELP than HELPERS,
HELPING, HELPED, HELPFUL, etc
○ If you know that a HELPER is a person who helps, you might guess that a
FARMER is a person who farms
○ FISHER might not be the word for a person who fishes, but we we would still
understand that was the intended meaning
Morphological Analysis
● Identifying morphemes and analyzing the way they are arranged in words
● Similar to a phonological analysis
● Identifying morphemes is fairly straightforward
Identifying Morphemes
● Finding the minimal units of meaning by comparing words and short phrases
● Look for similarities and differences of forms of meaning
● Example:
Farm Farmer Farmers
Walk Walker Walkers
Work Worker Workers
○ Farm, walk, and work are all morphemes describing actions
○ ER is a morpheme meaning “A person who ___”
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