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1. Language change and variation in English • • • • • • concepts of change and variation: how and why attitudes to language: standard and non-standard varieties the main phases in the history of English causes of the spread of English in the world present-day English: from English to Englishes English as a global language: advantages, disadvantages and future implications brainstorming on language change and variation 1. 2. 3. 4. Do languages change in time? Why do languages change? How do languages change? Why and how do languages vary at a given time in history? 5. What is “the best form” of a language? from general to expert knowledge: some concepts and terms 1. synchrony, diachrony, sociolinguistics, historical linguistics, history of the language, comparative linguistics, language family, Indo-European, Germanic family, Romance or Neo-Latin family 2. causes for language change: “external” (e.g. historical events, inventions, new ideas) versus “internal” (e.g. analogy, hypercorrection, push chain processes) 3. types of change: phonological, morpho-syntactic and semantic 4. standard and non-standard varieties Is the study of the history and varieties of English relevant to university students of English? Yes! 1. 2. 3. for cultural reasons to understand more about present-day English - the gap between spelling and pronunciation - the mixed nature of its lexis, e.g. “liberty” vs “freedom” - the existence of regular and irregular verbs - the linguistic situation of present-day UK vs. USA to reinforce practical competence - to improve pronunciation and grammatical correctness - to expand lexical competence - to be prepared to understand different varieties of English similarities among Indo-European languages • • • • • English Sanskrit Greek Latin Italian father pitar pater pater padre mother matar mater mater madre three trayas treis tres tre the Celts • Indo-European people who lived in Europe from 2000 BC to 100 AD • they inhabited the British Isles before the Roman and Anglo-Saxon invasions • names of Celtic origin: London, Leeds, Avon, Thames, Kent, Cornwall • very few Celtic words in Old English • Celtic languages spoken today: Welsh, Irish Gaelic, Scots Gaelic (Breton) historical periods and linguistic phases 1. The Anglo-Saxon period 1. Old English, OE (700-1150) 2. The Norman period 2. Middle English , ME (1150-1500) 3. Modern period 3. Modern English, ModE (15001900) Great Britain and Northern Ireland united under the British crown. New territories explored and stable colonies established in America, Asia and Africa 4. 20th century : from English to Englishes English as a global language 4. Present-day English (PDE) (1900 to the present) The story/history of English started in a small island 1. the United Kingdom (UK) of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is composed of England (London) Scotland (Edinburgh) Wales (Cardiff) Northern Ireland (Belfast) 2. Great Britain (GB)/Britain is composed of England Scotland Wales 3. The Republic of Ireland (Éire) (Dublin) Stonehenge (2500 BC) Stonehenge is a prehistoric monument, one of the most famous sites in the world. It is a ring made of standing stones belonging to the Neolithic/Bronze Age. The Roman baths of Bath The Roman Baths complex is a site of historical interest in the English city of Bath. It is a well-preserved Roman site for public bathing. Clean spa water can be drunk by visitors. Hadrian’s Wall Hadrian’s Wall was a defensive fortification in Roman Britain. Begun in AD 122, during the rule of emperor Hadrian, it was the first fortification built across Great Britain. Major historical events • Stonehenge, about 3000-2500 BC • 100 BC the first Celts appeared in Britain • 55-54 BC Julius Caesar invaded Britain – the Romans left it in the 5th century • 5th century: some Germanic tribes (AngloSaxons and Jutes) arrived in England and forced the Celts to move west and north Old English (OE) period (700-1150) • this term refers to Germanic dialects spoken by Jutes, Angles and Saxons: Kentish, WestSaxon, Mercian and Northumbrian • the West-Saxon reign was the most important religious, military and cultural centre in Europe • West-Saxon was considered the first standard written language, associated with political, military and cultural power in society Christianisation of Britain • 6th century • introduction of the Latin alphabet • abandonment of the Runic alphabet by the Anglo-Saxons • from the 9th to the 11th centuries manuscripts were translated from Latin into Old English • Latin and Greek gave Old English a wide range of words from the Gospel, i.e. related to religion and spirituality the Scandinavian Viking invasion (793 AD) • 8th century • dark ages recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, namely a collection of annals in Old English chronicling the history of the Anglo-Saxons • the Danes destroyed all the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms • King Alfred the Great raised an army and pushed the Danes out of his kingdom • King Alfred saved the English language • King Alfred commissioned the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and encouraged the use of English in writing and in speech Viking words obsolete • thorpe = settlement • beck = stream • by = farm still used • sky, skin, skirt, run, window, ombudsman the Gaelic (Celtic) countries in the British Isles an example of Old English (from Ælfric’s Colloquy, c. 998, intended to help students learn how to speak Latin through a conversation manual) OE: We cildra biddaþ þe, eala lareow, þæt þu tæce us [...] Latin: Nos pueri rogamus te, magister, ut doceas nos [...] PDE: Master, we young men would like you to teach us [...] features of Old English • • • • • Latin alphabet, with some differences from PDE (e.g. the consonant thorn or þorn <þ>, now <th>, inherited from the Runic alphabet and still surviving in Icelandic) nouns, adjectives and pronouns were inflected for case, number and gender (synthetic versus analytic language) two types of verbs (strong and weak) = regular and irregular verbs in PDE word order was free lexis was mainly Germanic but included words of Celtic (names of places, e.g. London), Latin (e.g. schol from schola) and Scandinavian origin (e.g. landes mann = PDE native) synthetic/inflectional language • in linguistic typology, a synthetic language is a language with a high morpheme-per-word ratio • grammar is determined by a system of inflections • the king se cyning • of the king thaes cyninges • to the king thaem cyninge PDE: The king meets the bishop OE: Se cyning (S) meteth (V) thone biscop (O) Thone biscop (O) meteth (V) se cyning (S) Middle English (ME) period (1150-1500) 1066 the Norman conquest – a new ruling class coming from France went into power: the Normans spoke French while Latin was the language of the Church and education; English was still the language of the majority of the population 1204 the Normans lost their power in favour of English kings 1215 the Magna Carta Libertatum (in Latin) was forced onto the king of England by his subjects, the feudal barons, in an attempt to limit his powers by law and protect their rights 14th century The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer: the most authoritative example of written literary English 1476 introduction of the printing press in England by William Caxton – invented in Germany by Johannes Gutenberg but already in use in China in 1040 Norman Britain • many Norman kings were often totally ignorant of their country’s language • government, law and administration were conducted in French and so was the Church, together with Latin • the Normans integrated with English society through marriage • in the 12th and 13th century French/English bilingualism existed in the upper middle classes and nobility • gradual shift to English French vocabulary • administration: government, treaty, royal, property, accuse, office, court, crown, marry • general vocabulary: people, age, country, flower, large, lesson • religion: confession, prayer, abbey, tempt • etymology of country: Middle English – from Old French cuntree, from medieval Latin contrata (terra) ‘(land) lying opposite’, from Latin contra ‘against, opposite’ animal vs. meat pig calf cow deer sheep snail pork veal beef venison mutton escargot Old English snæg(e)l, of Germanic origin; related to German Schnecke French, from Old French escargol, from Provençal escaragol Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) The Canterbury Tales Canterbury Cathedral From Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales ME: Thanne were ther yonge povre scolers two, That dwelten in this halle, of which I seye. PDE: Then there were two young poor scholars, Who dwelt in this hall, of which I tell. features of Middle English • reduction of the case system, particularly in nouns and adjectives • development of the future with shall/will and the present progressive • introduction of the pronoun she/shoe • increasingly fixed word order (with some variation) • French, e.g. marry from marier, and Latin, e.g. inferior, influence on vocabulary Modern English (ModE) period (1500-1900) • Early Modern English (1500-1800) • Late Modern English (1800-1900) Early Modern English (EModE) period (c. 1500-c. 1800) • the form of the English language spoken since the Great Vowel Shift (GVS) in England, completed in roughly 1550 • the GVS was a major change in the pronunciation of the English language between 1350 and 1700 • the term GVS was coined by the Danish linguist Otto Jespersen (1860–1943) • because English spelling was becoming standardized in the 15th and 16th centuries, the GVS is responsible for many of the peculiarities of English spelling The Great Vowel Shift (GVS) Britain: a united and powerful country • • • • • • 7 million inhabitants separation of the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church Queen Elisabeth I established the power of Britain on the seas great flourishing of the theatre and literature, e.g. Shakespeare, the King James Version – the authorized translation of the Bible the English Civil War (1642-1651) over the power of the Parliament versus the power of the Monarchy, i.e. Parliamentarians versus Royalists in 1702 England and Scotland were united under the British Crown Britain: a colonial world power • • • since the 17th century: English trading companies in India and slave trade in Africa In the 17th century: stable colonies established in America, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the Caribbean and South Africa 19th century: colonial empire in Asia and Africa Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603) • 1492: America discovered by Columbus • 1560s: Triangular trade aka Atlantic triangle • Queen Elizabeth I backing up Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Francis Drake in the antiSpanish campaign in the Caribbean → Elizabeth: The Golden Age William Shakespeare (baptised 26th April 1564 and died 23rd April 1616) Shakespeare’s famous quotes To be or not to be: that is the question. All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players. Parting is such sweet sorrow, that I shall say good night till it be morrow. What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. Brevity is the soul of wit. Love is blind. We have seen better days. As dead as a doornail. Bags and baggage. Fair play. I have not slept one wink. King James Version of the Bible (1611 ) a translation into English from Greek, Hebrew and Latin the beheading of Charles I during the Civil War (1649) the spread of English in the colonial era the British Empire A quotation from Love’s Labour Lost by Shakespeare I praise God for you sir, your reasons at dinner haue beene sharpe and sententious: pleasant without scurrillity, witty without affection, audacious without impudency, learned without opinion, and strange without heresie: I did conuerse this quondam day with a companion… Late Modern English (LModE) period (1800-1900) • simplification of inflection (only ‘s genitive and -s plural in nouns, the comparative and superlative endings in adjectives) with the exception of pronouns • tendency towards fixed word order • debate between Neologisers (in favour of words of foreign origin) and Purists (in favour of native words) Standard English (SE) • Development of a standard form of English through long processes of selection (London English) and codification through grammars and dictionaries • Development of a standard accent: Received Pronunciation (RP) Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language (1755) LEXICO’GRAPHER. n.s. [? lixicographe, French.] A writer of dictionories; a harmless drudge, that busies himself in tracing the original, and detailing the signification of words. the four main periods of English: a summary Old English (OE) (700-1100) ● fully inflected ● free word order ● Germanic vocabulary Modern English (ModE) (1500-1900) ● very limited inflection ● greater use of fixed word order ● codification of language Middle English (ME) (1100-1500) ● reduced inflection ● increasingly fixed word order ● French influence on vocabulary Present-Day English (PDE) (1900-nowadays) ● language spread and differentiation ● formation of new varieties worldwide ● English as a global lingua franca the reasons for the present predominance of English in the world: a summary external reasons: the colonial and industrial power of Great Britain in the 18th and 19th centuries; the political, economic and technological power of the USA in the 20th century; the number of speakers; the geographical spread; cultural heritage internal reasons (myths): clarity, simplicity, size of its vocabulary, flexibility in creating new words, adaptability to distant contexts Present-Day English (PDE) (1900-nowadays) main political and cultural events 1. English is the official – or main – language of many important countries in the world, e.g. the UK, the USA, Australia, Canada, New Zealand 2. English has been retained as the official language (along with other native languages) in more than 70 former British colonies after their political independence, e.g. India, the Caribbean and several African countries 3. English has acquired growing importance worldwide in science, technology, international organisations and business Why has English become a global language? 1. 2 3. 4. native varieties of English – English as a Native Language (ENL or L1) varieties of English as a Second Language (ESL or L2), used internationally in former British colonies in the institutional, media and educational fields English as a Foreign Language (EFL), English as a Lingua Franca (ELF), English for Special Purposes (ESP), e.g. Airspeak, Policespeak, Business English (BE), English for Academic Purposes (EAP) within each category there is a continuum from an educated standard to a very limited form of communication The three circles of PDE The three-circles model for PDE by Braj Kachru Native varieties or “Colonial Englishes” • a set of different but related varieties which share a common core of grammar and vocabulary • differing mainly in pronunciation and lexis • the two main native varieties are British English (BrE) and American English (AmE) • BrE and AmE provide the norms for EFL learners Second language varieties or New Englishes • used in institutional or educational contexts in multilingual countries, usually former British colonies • have gone through a process of language contact, e.g. as honest as an elephant • have been progressively acknowledged as local standards, e.g. Indian English, Caribbean English, East-African English • share common features that are different from native standard varieties mistakes or linguistic creativity? 1. I was feeling thirsty, so I bought one soda 2. Last time she come on Thursday 3. We are having something to do 4. Whenever we go there they be playing 5. She came yesterday, isn’t it? the speech community of PDE • bilingualism or multilingualism is the norm • languages play an important role in the construction of people’s identities • language contact • nativization, hybridization, code-switching • new coinages: been-to = ‘a person who has spent a long time abroad’; change-room = dressing room English as a Foreign Language (EFL) - either choose one of the native standards for production on the basis of proximity, tradition, personal needs or taste, e.g. British English or American English - or favour a non-native model, i.e. English as a Lingua Franca (ELF) - be prepared to understand different varieties English as a Lingua Franca (ELF) in the past: contact languages for trade, e.g. pidgins and creoles in Africa based on English and African languages now: in international scientific conferences, business meetings or the internet, ELF based on a core of norms drawing on British and American English and intended to guarantee mutual international intelligibility the predominance of English advantages disadvantages world languages have always existed English is ‘killing’ other languages and cultures people are becoming lazy in learning other languages English expresses a particular world view and favours its native speakers (cultural imperialism) English has become uncontrollable What about interpreters and translators? a world language is necessary in a globalised world a post-national language may be useful to world democracy and citizenship Who owns English today? “… the English language ceased to be the sole possession of the English some time ago” (Salman Rushdie, 1991) the future of English: from English to Englishes Will English…? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. go on being a polycentric language comprising several mutually intelligible varieties? achieve a balance between identity and international intelligibility? remain strong until English-speaking countries are powerful? fragment into mutually unintelligible languages as already happened to Latin and the Romance languages? be rejected as a symbol of colonialism, e.g. Malaysia, or cultural imperialism? be spoken as a simplified lingua franca by non-native speakers? Linguistic variability all languages are open and dynamic entities which adapt to the history and culture of the speech communities in which they are in use Standard vs. non-standard varieties a standard variety is the language par excellence in terms of social prestige, language functions and domains of use e.g. the West-Saxon dialect in the OE period, the first standard written language (9th-11th centuries) e.g. London English used by Caxton in the ME period (15th century) e.g. English used by educated speakers and the mass media all over the world (21th century) Sociolinguistics • a branch of linguistics that studies the relationship between language and society, i.e. according to social variables • social variables: class, gender (men/women), age (young/old), ethnicity, etc. • attitudes (positive/negative) influence language change: some variants may be perceived as more or less prestigious Labov’s analysis of the pronunciation of the phoneme [r] in New York City according to social class and style (1960s) (0-5 = lower class; 5-9 = middle and upper class , e.g. fourth floor) Hypercorrection • speakers tend to conform to the more prestigious linguistic norms • hypercorrection originates from the over-application of a perceived rule of grammar or usage: a speaker/writer who produces hypercorrection believes that the form is correct through misunderstanding of these rules, often combined with a desire to appear formal or educate • hypercorrection is more typical of socially insecure speakers such as middle classes and women • e.g. he gave it to you and I vs. he gave it to you and me Historical or diachronic linguistics the main paradigm (approach) to the study of language change 1. comparative linguistics or language reconstruction 2. the history of language: the changes in a language over the centuries Internal and external causes of change • internal (linguistic factors): regularization, i.e. the levelling of the OE inflectional case system e.g. OE stān/a/es/as/e/um → PDE stone • external: extralinguistic or social factors (invasions, technological innovations, immigration waves) Types of language change • phonological • morpho-syntactic • semantic Phonological change • sporadic phonological change • regular phonological change • unconditioned phonological change: regardless of the phonemic environment • conditioned phonological change: taking place in a particular phonetic environment examples of phonological change • loss of <r> e.g. OE spræc → PDE speak • the split of /n/ and // in the 17th century e.g. sin vs. sing • the Great Vowel Shift (from the 15th century) Morpho-syntactic change • levelling of the OE case system • word order in ME • grammaticalization, i.e. the change from lexical items to grammatical items e.g. OE wilan ‘want’ (main verb) → PDE will (modal verb) Semantic change Phonetics and phonology • accents of English: native, foreign, ‘nativized’ • Received Pronunciation (RP) vs General American (GA) • phonetics and phonology • the articulators • graphemes and phonemes • homophones and homographs • International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) • English phonetics and phonology accents of English: native, foreign, ‘nativized’ • accent: the way in which a language is pronounced in a specific geographical area • native: UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand • foreign: where English is a foreign language, e.g. Italy, Japan • ‘nativized’: where English is a second language, e.g. India Received Pronunciation (RP) and General American (GA) • Received pronunciation (RP) or BBC English: best described accent of English - public schools - upper classes • General American (GA) or American English phonetics and phonology • phonetics: the science that studies the physical characteristics of sound - articulatory: production - acoustic: spectro-temporal properties - auditory: perception • phonology: describes the organization of the sound system of a language the articulators graphemes and phonemes • grapheme: a letter of the alphabet , i.e. a discrete mark in writing or print – between angle brackets, e.g. <t> • phoneme: a distinctive sound in a language capable of creating a distinction in meaning between two words – between slashes (or square brackets), e.g. /d/ dog, /l/ log, /f/ fog silent graphemes • <t> in castle, Christmas, often (by some speakers) • <k> in know, knock • <l> in walk, talk, folk • <w> in write, wrong • <b> in debt, bomb, doubt English phonology • segmental: describes the phonemes of a language and the way they combine • suprasegmental: describes the units larger than the phonemes (syllables, rhythm groups and intonation phrases) • • • • • • phonemes and allophones vowels the vowel diagram diphthongs non-phonemic symbols sentences in phonetic transcription phonetic diagram (11 vowels in English) trapezio vocalico (7 vowels in Italian) • • • • • • consonants voicing syllabic consonants rhoticity and r-linking English/Italian phonemes in contrast passages in phonetic transcription consonants • consonants are sounds produced with an egressive flow of air coming out of the mouth or the nose accompanied by obstruction or friction in the articulators • whereas all vowels are voiced, consonants can be voiced or voiceless depending on the vibration or otherwise of the vocal cords I’ve been reading some interesting research about how people’s moods are affected by sunlight. People from southern countries are supposed to be more outgoing than those from the north. Some scientists have shown that if you’re not exposed to a certain minimum amount of sunlight you may well become depressed. The Italian language accepts English words easily. Some are used in Italian with completely different meanings. An example is the word flipper, the game called pinball in English. CDs have taken over from records which developed from a machine called phonograph. However the inventors of the phonograph never thought it would be used for music. Idioms are not a separate part of the language which one can choose either to use or to omit. Instead they form an essential part of the general vocabulary of English. Present-day English is changing and becoming more idiomatic. Mass tourism in the mountain regions of industrialized countries began after the Second World War. This new phenomenon was a result of many factors including increases in urban population, vacation time and mobility. Today because of cheap global air travel almost no mountains in any corner of the world are out of reach. Damage to the environment caused by tourists has become increasingly frequent in recent years but it is not necessarily a destructive force. Tourism should be better integrated into mountain areas with a minimal impact on the environment. OALD www.oxfordadvancedlearnersdictionary.com CALD dictionary.cambridge.org MEDAL www.macmillandictionary.com LDOCE www.ldoceonline.com Supra-segmental Phonology • the syllable • stress • stress patterns stress • prominence given to a syllable • - the result of four acoustic components: pitch (altezza) loudness (volume) duration (lunghezza) quality (qualità) • in phonetic transcription stress is indicated by a vertical line (stress mark) preceding the stressed syllable Underline the word which does not have the same stress pattern in the lists below. trouble Britain cigar jingle poker alone perhaps respect Turkey deny colleague outline someone control Monday upstairs divert goodbye thirteen freedom president dictation Arabic diplomat visitor imitate photograph glorify wonderful obedient newsreader important grandfather homecoming headhunter vacation sincerely suspicion professor library vibration lefthanded dangerous unlikely organic • connected speech • similitude • linking • assimilation • elision • vowel reduction and weak forms Connected speech • continuous stream of sound • characterised by articulatory accommodations and sound variability • three main factors: - the influence of the phonetic environment - the rhythmic pattern - the speed of the utterance • • • • American English rhythm intonation functions of intonation punctuation • pay attention to English punctuation: comma (,), colon (:), semi-colon (;), full stop/period (.), dot-dot-dot (…) • pay attention to initial capital letters: English, Italian, I, Monday, March, etc. The Grammar of English Definitions of grammar • a set of rules which allow the production of wellformed sentences and utterances • educated native speakers intuitively follow the rules of grammar • foreign learners study grammar in an explicit way in textbooks • non-native speakers may develop new rules which deviate from standard rules examples • *I never did nothing to upset her. (rule: multiple negation is not permitted in English). The correct sentence is: I never did anything to upset her) • *She came yesterday, isn’t it? (rule: the tag question must contain an auxiliary in accordance with the type of verb used in the main clause). The correct sentence is: She came yesterday, didn’t she? Descriptive vs Theoretical grammar • Descriptive grammar describes how a language works, drawing on a long tradition of grammatical studies, using both traditional and new terminology (e.g. subject, embedding) • Theoretical grammars are new analytical models developed by linguists to describe a language (e.g. Systemic-functional Grammar). • ‘metalanguage’ Morphology and Syntax • Morphology: the area of grammar dealing with the internal structure of words • Morphology can be divided into derivational and inflectional • Syntax: the area of grammar dealing with the way in which words combine to form larger units such as phrases, clauses and sentences. The Units of Grammar • A hierarchy of units (rank scale) Top down text sentence clause phrase word morpheme Bottom up Morpheme: the smallest linguistic unit of meaning and grammatical function e.g. un- , -less, and, glad, -s Word: linguistic unit preceded and followed by spaces in written language A golden sun filled the air with light and the green sea lapped the sand (15 words) Phrase: a linguistic unit made up of a word or a group of words A golden sun (Noun Phrase= sintagma nominale) Clause: a linguistic unit made up of one or more phrases, containing at least a verb phrase e.g. A golden sun (NP) filled (VP) the air (NP) Sentence: the largest linguistic unit made up of one or more clauses e.g. A golden sun filled the air with light and the green sea lapped the sand John told me that he would like to move to Paris Text: a sequence of sentences which is coherent and cohesive Word • a word is a linguistic unit which in the written form has a space on either side (orthographic criterion) but: weekend, week-end, week end brother-in-law (cognato) identity card Other criteria of wordhood • Internal stability: Elephant, elephants but brother-in-law, brothers-in-law • A word expresses a single concept: but the (function word), dry, get (polysemy) Lexeme, word-form • LIST v. list, lists, listing, listed (lexeme) (word-forms) • LIST n. list, lists (lexeme) (word-forms) • TEACH teach, teaches, taught, teaching (lexeme) (word-form) Lexeme: a unit of vocabulary which includes different variant form, called word-forms • Lexicography: entry (voce), headword (lemma) walk n. walk v. lexeme1 lexeme2 (passeggiata) (passeggiare) bank n. bank n. lexeme1 lexeme2 (money) (river) How many words are there in this sentence? I asked him to list all his books, but instead of listing them all, he listed only the relevant ones and his favourite book 24 or 16? Word / word-forms / lexemes List / listing / listed = 3 word forms of the lexeme TO LIST Book / books = 2 word forms of the lexeme BOOK He / him / his = three word forms of the lexeme HE (24 word-forms, 16 lexemes) Word classes (parts of speech) • • • 9 major word classes: nouns, lexical verbs, adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, prepositions, determiners, pronouns, auxiliary verbs 3 minor word classes: inserts or interjections (Wow, Hey), whwords, numerals some word-forms may belong to more than one class (e.g. round n. adj. v. prep. Divide the following words into 2 groups: pig, autumn, me, explain, they, which, sing, suddenly, from, today, biology, and, truth, could, the, extraordinary, since, hot, announce, in • pig, autumn, explain, sing, suddenly, today, biology, truth, extraordinary, hot, announce • me, they, which, from, and, could, the, since, in Open and closed classes • open-class words lexical words content words 4 classes: nouns, (lexical) verbs, adjectives, adverbs • closed-class words grammatical words function words 5 classes: conjunctions, prepositions, determiners, pronouns, auxiliary verbs open-class words • length: (generally) polysyllabic • origin: (generally) Latin, Greek, French, Germanic origin • frequency: less frequent closed-class words • length: (generally) monosyllabic or disyllabic • origin: (generally) Germanic origin • frequency: more frequent Nouns (N) • Nouns are lexical words which refer to concrete objects or entities e.g. house (common, concrete, countable), Mary, London (proper), love (common, abstract), sugar (common, concrete, uncountable) • they may take the ’s genitive case (genitivo sassone) Verbs (V) • open class denoting actions or states • lexical/main/full verbs e.g. I like English He walked to school • auxiliary verbs (or auxiliaries) are added to lexical verbs for various purposes e.g. I could go faster. (modality) John is going nowhere. (aspect) Do you go to school? (question) I do love him! (emphasis) Lexical Verbs (V) • dynamic: referring to physical processes = allow the progressive form e.g. to play, to walk, to drink • stative/state: referring to states and conditions = do not allow the progressive form e.g. to know, to love, to believe Adjectives (Adj) • Adjectives are lexical words which describe qualities and properties of things, people, etc. e.g. happy, blue, wonderful - gradable (very happy) - ungradable (dead, married) • attributive function: before a noun e.g. the extraordinary boy • predicative function: after copular verbs (to be, to seem, to appear) e.g. John is tall • some adjectives are only used in either attributive or predicative function e.g.the child is afraid (predicative) *the afraid child e.g.the main task (attributive) *the task is main Adverbs (Adv) • Adverbs are lexical words which carry out several functions: - degree adverbs express degree (very, really, totally) - circumstance adverbs provide information about the circumstances of an event or state, i.e., how, when, and where (yesterday, now) - disjuncts allow the speaker to comment on the whole utterance (probably, unfortunately) - linking adverbs or conjuncts: connect one sentence or part of a sentence to another (besides) Fortunately, today the dog has eaten his food very quietly outside. She wasn’t free to go to New York at Christmas and besides she couldn’t afford it. Prepositions (Prep) • show the relationship between two items • are typically followed by a noun phrase with which they form a Prepositional Phrase (PP) e.g. the dog ran under the table [the table]=NP [under [the table]]=PP • simple: single word e.g. under, over, at, on • complex: more than one word according to, on behalf of, with regard to Determiners (Det) Function words used before a noun to indicate definiteness or indefiniteness, quantity, possession, etc. e.g. all these sugary cookies filled with jam and cream Subclasses of determiners • articles (indefinite and definite): a, an, the • demonstrative: this, that, these, those • possessive: my, your, his, her, their, our, its etc. • quantifiers: all, few, many, several, some, every, each, any, etc. • cardinal numbers: one, two, fifty, etc. • ordinal numbers: first, second, third, etc. Pronouns (Pron) closed class of words which replace words avoiding repetitions e.g. Michelle was offered an exciting new job and she decided to take it Subclasses of pronouns • personal pronouns e.g. They love football (subject) She loves them (object) • possessive pronouns e.g. This book is mine • demonstrative pronouns e.g. This is my friend Tom • reflexive pronouns e.g. She hurt herself • interrogative pronouns e.g. Whose car is this? • relative pronouns e.g. This is the car which/that I want to buy Auxiliaries (Aux) A closed class of verbs which accompany lexical verbs Two subclasses: • primary auxiliaries have, be, do e.g. Liz is looking for a job, Do you speak English? She has studied a lot • modal auxiliaries (modality) can, could, shall, should, will, would, may, might, must, e.g. I must go now! Would you like a cup of coffee? Wh-words A frequently used expression to refer to function words beginning with wh adverbs (interrogative, relative, exclamative) e.g. When did you call her? pronouns (interrogative, relative, exclamative) e.g. Whose car is that? determiners (interrogative, relative, exclamative) e.g. Which book did you choose? Numerals • cardinal, e.g. one, two, three, etc. • ordinal, e.g. first, second, third, etc. • numerals may function as nouns e.g. The Magnificent Seven Morphology Morphology inflectional morphology deals with changes in the form of words that have grammatical meaning e.g. -est signals the superlative of adjectives derivational morphology deals with the process of new word formation e.g. happy unhappiness What is a morpheme? unhappy cats un-happy cat-s • A morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning or grammatical function • free: can stand alone as words - lexical e.g. pen, book - functional e.g. if, the • bound: cannot stand alone and must be linked to another morpheme (called base or root) e.g. -ly, un-, -able, -ee - derivational e.g. -ness, -able - inflectional e.g. -s, -ing morphemes and morphs played unhelpful impolitely words play-ed {PLAY} + {past} un-help-ful {negative} + {HELP} + {adjective} im-polite-ly {negative} + {POLITE} + {adverb} morphs (concrete) morphemes (abstract) root and base root = the core of the word, the morpheme which determines the meaning of the word e.g. happy is the root of happiness bound root = a root that is not independent e.g. dent- in dentist, dental, dentistry (Latin dens, dentis) base = part of the word to which any affixes are attached (inflectional or derivational) e.g. happy is the base of unhappy; unhappy is the base of unhappiness Identification of units (clauses, phrases, words, morphemes) in a sentence example: The young lady bought a pair of very expensive shoes and walked out of the shop. (sentence) clauses: the sentence consists of two clauses which are joined by the coordinating conjunction and: the young lady bought a pair of very expensive shoes walked out of the shop. phrases: the young lady (NP), bought (VP), a pair of very expensive shoes (NP), walked (VP), out of the shop (PP). words: the, young, lady, bought, a, pair, of, very, expensive, shoes, and, walked, out of, shop. morphemes: the, young, lady, buy, -ed (inflectional morpheme), a, pair, of, very, expense, -ive (derivational morpheme), shoe, -s (bound inflectional morpheme), and, walk, out, of, shop Morpheme identification handwriting, unmarried, uncomfortable, walked, volleyball, smaller, unhappiness, employee, unemployment, blackboard, pubs, businesswoman, headteachers, cheerful, unkindness, unfaithfulness, dishonest, singers hand+write+ing un+marry+ed un+comfort+able walk+ed volley+ball small+er un+happy+ness employ+ee un+employ+ment black+board pub+s busy+ness+woman head+teach+er+s cheer+ful un+kind+ness un+faith+ful+ness dis+honest sing+er+s Morpheme identification unthinkable: un- (bound, derivational prefix), think (free, root), -able (bound, derivational suffix) actors: act (free, root), -or (bound, derivational suffix), -s (bound, inflectional suffix). computerize: compute (free, root), -er (bound, derivational suffix), -ize (bound, derivational suffix). unbelievable - incredible - decolonialised unbelievable: un- (bound, derivational prefix), believe (free root), -able (bound, derivational suffix) incredible: in- (bound derivational prefix), cred- (bound root), -ible (bound derivational suffix) decolonialised: de- (bound derivational prefix), colony (free root), -al (bound derivational suffix), -ise (bound derivational suffix), -ed (bound inflectional suffix) PDE regular inflections nouns nouns verbs verbs verbs verbs adjectives adjectives -s -’s -s -ed -ed -ing -er -est plural, possessive case 3rd pers. sing. past tense, past participle gerund comparative superlative • some nouns have irregular plural endings e.g. children, teeth, mice, oxen, curricula, sheep • uncountable nouns: e.g. evidence, advice, equipment, information verb inflections most English verbs are regular and have a paradigm of 5 word forms and 4 verb inflections e.g. love / loves / loved / loved / loving there is a smaller number of very frequently used irregular verbs e.g. take, took, taken put, put, put speak, spoke, spoken lose, lost, lost go, went, gone auxiliaries are very irregular, e.g. the verb to be has forms that differ from one another, e.g. am, are, is, was, were, been, being (suppletion) most modal verbs do not inflect and have only two forms, e.g. may, might, can, could gradability of adjectives and adverbs synthetic comparison: -er ending -est ending (comparative) e.g. warmer (superlative) e.g. finest analytic comparison more and most e.g. more/most interesting more quickly • irregular comparison (process of suppletion) e.g. good, better, best; little, less, least; much, more, most; well, better, best; bad, worse, worst pronoun inflection pronouns, personal pronouns in particular, have retained a certain degree of inflection in PDE e.g. personal pronouns express number, gender and case often through suppletive forms I - me; we - us, you - you, he - him, she - her, it - it, they - them phrase • a unit of syntax made up of one or more words • it contains an obligatory head element and optional modifiers The black labrador (NP) was chewing (VP) a juicy bone (NP) very noisily (AdvP) types of phrases Noun Phrase (NP) Verb Phrase (VP) Adjective Phrase (AdjP) Adverb Phrase (AdvP) Prepositional Phrase (PP) • except for prepositional phrases (PP), phrases can be constituted by a single lexical item • all phrases can be extended by pre-modification or post-modification types of Noun Phrases determiner - pre-modifier - HEAD post-modifier John - suitcase - My leather (n.) A large, old, blue suitcase (size, age, colour) with wheels (PP) more Noun Phrases det. pre-modifier HEAD post-modifier The London experience - - London’s churches - The - London I know (clause) build Noun Phrases Determiner The pre-modifier ugly, tabby HEAD cat A nice, Australian bloke The tall, modern building post-modifier on Paul’s computer desktop/on the desktop of Paul’s computer with a red Ferrari in the centre of town ambiguity in NPs • The French history teacher the (det.) French (pre-mod.) history (pre-mod.) teacher (head) [the] [French] [history teacher] (the teacher of history is French) [the] [French history] [teacher] (the teacher teaches French history) tree diagram (the teacher of history is French) NP det. mod. head NP mod. head The French history teacher tree diagram (the teacher teaches French history) NP det. mod. NP mod. The head head French history teacher TREE DIAGRAM “An interesting government report about air pollution” NP det. mod.(adj.) mod.(n.) head mod.PP head C (NP) mod.(n.) head An interesting government report about air pollution relative clause as a post-modifier of a NP The man who came to dinner NP det. the head (n.) man mod. (clause) who came to dinner relative clause as a post-modifier of a NP The man who came to dinner NP det. head (n.) mod. (clause) S:NP P:VP V A:PP h(prep.) C:NP h(pron.) the man who h(v.) came h (n.) to dinner complex post-modification • The proposal for a new building which the committee put forward last week - for a new building (PP) - which the committee put forward last week (relative clause) activity • Analyse the constituent parts of the following NPs illustrating with tree diagrams: 1) A luxury apartment in the heart of Oxford 2) That rather disgustingly dirty carpet 3) A very interesting book about Renaissance art in Italy frequency of NPs in English • pre-modification is more common than post-modification in all registers • complex pre- and post-modification is typical of some registers such as written academic prose and newspaper headlines English vs. Italian NPs Translate these noun phrases into Italian and notice the differences between the two languages The Los Angeles Police Department Il Dipartimento di Polizia di Los Angeles 2. Air pollution L’inquinamento dell’aria 3. The Birmingham train Il treno per/da/di (?) Birmingham 4. Stansted airport L’aeroporto di Stansted 5. The proposal of a national curriculum La proposta di un curricolo nazionale 6. The country’s leading expert on youth culture Il maggior esperto del paese sulla cultura giovanile 1. Italian versus English NPs English favours premodification (to the left of the head). NPs are concise and at times ambiguous • The Los Angeles Police Department Italian favours postmodification (to the right of the head) and the use of prepositions. NPs are longer and more explicit • Il Dipartimento di Polizia di Los Angeles Verb Phrases: finite/non-finite • finite verbs or VPs: marked by tense e.g. John plays the guitar I enjoyed the concert • non-finite verbs or VPs: not marked by tense, person or number e.g. To arrive on time was their objective She travelled accompanied by her father She broke her leg while skiing Verb Phrases: tense (form) vs. time (meaning) • tense: property allowing the verb to differentiate between present and past e.g. Jane likes music / Jane liked music • Unlike in Italian, there is no morphologically marked form to express the future in English but a range of forms such as will/shall+ infinitive, going to, simple present, present progressive Verb Phrase: aspect property allowing the verb to give information about the state or the action • progressive (or continuous): the action is in progress Sarah is helping her sister • perfect: the action is complete, that is it occurred at an earlier time and continues to the time of utterance or is relevant to it Sarah has helped her sister to take her degree • perfect + progressive: (often called ‘duration form’) stresses continuity in the past and includes the time of utterance Sarah has been helping her sister since she was 12 Translate into Italian and identify the main differences between the two languages 1. Sarah helps her sister every Thursday Sarah aiuta sua sorella ogni giovedì 2. Sarah is helping her sister a lot Sarah aiuta/sta aiutando molto sua sorella 3. Sarah has helped her sister to recover from illness Sarah ha aiutato sua sorella a guarire dalla malattia 4. Sarah helped her sister one year ago when she was ill Sarah aiutò sua sorella un anno fa, quando era malata 5. Sarah has been helping her sister since last May Sarah aiuta/sta aiutando/ha aiutato sua sorella dallo scorso maggio Translate from Italian into English 1. Sono andata a Londra molte volte I’ve been to London many times 2. Vivo a Londra I live in London 3. Vado a Londra ogni anno I go to London every year 4. Vivo a Londra da 5 anni e ne sono felice I’ve been living in London for five years and I’m happy 5. Ho vissuto a Londra per cinque anni prima di tornare in Italia I lived in London for five years before moving back to Italy 6. Vivevo a Londra quando ho incontrato John I was living in London when I met John verb phrase: voice (active vs. passive) • The singer performed the song • The song was performed by the singer • NP1+VP+ NP2 NP2 +be+VPed+ by+NP1 • The singer was performing the song • The song was being performed by the singer functions of the passive • the agent is unknown or irrelevant Mr Constable has been murdered • the focus is on the process to convey objectivity, especially in academic prose The results of the tests have been checked several times • to disclaim responsibility He is said to be a womanizer the passive is more frequent in scientific writing and in the press Discuss the concepts of “tense” and “aspect” in the English verb system and illustrate with examples. Tense and aspect are grammatical categories of verbs. Tense refers to the distinction between present and past forms of verbs (I think vs I thought), while aspect refers to the state of the action (progressive or perfect). In English we may distinguish between progressive and perfect aspects: I’m reading a book describes an action in progress and still incomplete, while I’ve read an interesting book describes a completed action which is still relevant to the time of the utterance. In English it is also possible to combine the progressive and the perfective aspect in sentences like I’ve been living in London for five years/ I’ve been living in London since 2007. Unlike Italian, English does not have a morphologically marked future tense. To express future events the most common forms are will+verb, be+ going to+verb or the present progressive form, eg We are going to buy a new car. Tense does not coincide with time. In fact, it is possible to say The games start next week. The Verb Phrase: summary • The VP consists of a head verb, either alone or accompanied by one or more auxiliaries • If the VP contains only one verb, it must be a lexical verb (arrived) • If the VP contains more verbs, one is a lexical verb and the others are pre-modifying auxiliaries or modals (is arriving, has arrived, may arrive, might be arriving, etc.) The role of auxiliary verbs • They are used to express grammatical categories such as aspect, voice and modality. • The primary auxiliary be is used to form the passive voice (the man was hit by a car) and the progressive aspect (I am working) • The primary auxiliary have is used to form the perfect aspect (I have worked) • The primary auxiliary do is used to form the negative and interrogative forms (I don’t know, Do you know?) modal verbs and modality they are frequently used in English and belong to the Germanic core of the language they express a wide range of meanings referring either to actions controlled by humans (deontic modality) or to the levels of certainty of an event (epistemic modality) the same modals can express different meanings; the same meanings can be expressed in different ways the main meanings of modal verbs 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. permission e.g. Can I ask you a question? Could I borrow your notes? (Am I allowed to ask a question?) ability e.g. I can ski (I know how to do it) possibility e.g. She may be ill. She might be ill (Perhaps she is ill) obligation e.g. You must stop talking. You should pay attention. logical necessity (probability) e.g. She must be ill (She is very likely to be ill) volition e.g. I’ll do it for you prediction e.g. It will rain tomorrow what about modal verbs in Italian? Translate the following expressions into English: 1. Devi smettere di fumare You must (personal)/have to (external) stop smoking 2. Dovresti smettere di fumare You should stop smoking 3. Posso fumare? Can I smoke? 4. Potrei fumare? May I smoke? 5. Domani può piovere Tomorrow it may rain (possibility) 6. Domani potrebbe piovere Tomorrow it might rain (remote possibility) 7. Domani pioverà Tomorrow it will rain (forecast)/is going to rain (certainty) 8. Sa sciare molto bene He can ski very well 9. Sapeva sciare bene quando era giovane He used to be able to ski well when he was young Italian has the verbs potere, sapere and dovere Some modal expressions are expressed through the conditional mood or the future tense, which do not exist as morphologically marked forms in English other phrases • Adjective Phrase (AdjP) e.g. extremely important, very unhappy, good at languages • Adverb Phrase (AdvP) e.g. very badly, perfectly well • Prepositional Phrase (PP) e.g. in the garden, to London Syntax How can a clause be analysed? Subject (S) + predicate (P), i.e. VP + other optional/obligatory elements John (what is talked about) is English (what is said about the topic) S and P are the main functional elements of the clause S and P are the “immediate constituents” (Chomsky) of the clause Clause and clause elements • A clause is a syntactic unit made up of one or more phrases, containing at least one VP: e.g. Run! John sang. My brother gave me a beautiful dress. Did you like the concert last night? 5 major clause elements (constituents) • • • • • Subject (S) Verb (V) Object (O) Complement (C) Adverbial (A) Word Order • Translate the following clauses into English: Seguiranno alcuni esempi Some examples will follow Nel capitolo 3 verrà presentata la grammatica Grammar will be presented in Chapter 3 Giovanni parla molto bene l’italiano/l’italiano molto bene John speaks Italian very well Odio stirare I hate ironing Piove forte da molte ore It’s been raining heavily for many hours • C’è un gatto in giardino There is a cat in the garden • The unmarked word order in English is SVO, while in Italian this order can vary to a certain extent • The subject is compulsory in English and not in Italian • If there is no subject, a ‘dummy’ subject will be used (it/there) The Verb the verb is the central part of the clause since it determines the other elements (e.g. verb complementation or valency) She was laughing one-place verb She was playing the piano two-place verb She was very beautiful two-place verb She gave him a kiss three-place verb She made him happy three-place verb clause elements S V O The black labrador (NP) has bitten (VP) Mr Allington (NP) C A in the garden (PP) Optional A He (NP) put (VP) the keys (NP) in his bag (PP) Obligatory A Sue (NP) is feeling (VP) very sleepy (AdjP) S V O C A It (dummy subject) is going (VP) to rain (non- finite VP) Armstrong (NP) became (VP) the first man on the moon (NP) Chris (NP) made (VP) Sara (NP) really angry yesterday (AdjP) (AdvP) What I don’t understand (clause) is (VP) why you lied to me (clause) S+V+Oi+Od (di-transitive) S V Oi (Indirect Object) Od (Direct Object) My friend told me a lie Sue gave her sister a glass of wine John showed his friends his new car SV (intransitive verb): no complementation The black labrador was barking clause S:NP det. mod.(adj.) the black P:VP head (n.) labrador aux. head (v.) was barking A new teacher has arrived SVOd (monotransitive) Andrew bought a sports car clause S:NP P:VP V head (n.) head (v.) Andrew bought Od:NP det. mod. (adj.) head (n.) a sports car My sister plays the piano SVA (+ an obligatory Adverbial) The taxi is waiting outside clause S:NP P:VP V det. The head (n.) taxi aux. head (v.) is waiting A:AdvP head (adv.) outside The waiter put the bread on the table SVCs (copular verb) The weather has turned very nasty clause S:NP P:VP V det. The head (n.) aux. head(v.) weather has turned C:AdjP mod.(adv.) head(adj.) very nasty The news sounds very interesting My 80-year-old grandmother is in good health Copular verbs • be, feel, seem, appear, look, remain, stay, become, sound, taste e.g. I am/feel rather tired (C: AdjP) She became a nurse (C: NP) You look extremely happy (C: AdjP) Mary appeared in good health (C: PP) That is what I mean (C: clause) SVOiOd (di-transitive) Gill told her child a bedtime story clause S:NP P:VP V head(n.) Gill head(v.) told Oi:NP Od:NP det. head(n.) det. mod.(n.) h(n.) her child a bedtime story She should tell me the truth Di-transitive verbs • Give, tell, bring, buy, show e.g. John showed me (Oi) his new car (Od) They bought him (Oi) a new racket (Od) Tell us (Oi) the truth (Od) SVOdCo (complex transitive) The judges declared Jackie the winner clause S:NP P:VP V det. head (n.) head (v.) The judges declared O:NP Co:NP head(n.) det. h(n.) Jackie the winner Rebecca considers her brother a genious SVOdA Terry put the rubbish in the dustbin clause S:NP P:VP V head (n.) O:NP head(v.) det. h(n.) A:PP h (prep) C:NP det. h(n.) Terry put the rubbish in the dustbin The driver threw the bottle out of the window The 7 basic clause patterns • • • • • • SV (intransitive) The dog is barking SVA (intransitive+obligatory A) They are waiting outside SVCs (copulative) You look great SVOd (monotransitive) I miss my family SVOiOd (di-transitive) John showed me his new car SVOdCo (complex-transitive) The judges declared Jackie the winner • SVOdA (transitive with obligatory A) The waiter put the bread on the table In the summer A:PP high humidity levels S:NP make P:VP the weather O:NP unbearable Co:AdjP Complement • Cs (complemento predicativo del soggetto) It follows copular verbs be, feel, seem, appear, look… I am/feel tired You look/ appear/seem tired • Co (complemento predicativo dell’oggetto) It follows a direct object and occurs with complex transitive verbs make, elect, consider, find, call… This experience made me stronger I found his reaction stupid Adverbial • Optional elements added to the obligatory elements of the clause • Circumstance adverbial: additional information e.g. The taxi is waiting outside • Stance adverbial: speaker’s feeling / attitude e.g. Hopefully I will pass all my exams in June • Linking adverbial e.g. In conclusion, all’s well that ends well. Obligatory adverbial • Adverbials that are required to complete the meaning of the verb e.g. Sally put the bread on the table (obligatory Adverbial) vs. Sally cut the bread on the table (optional Adverbial) Verbs: put, last, live Adverbials vs. complements • • • • • • John was very quiet (C) John was in bed (A) They are in danger (C) They are in the garden (A) You should stay sober (C) You should stay here (A) Complements describe or characterize the S (or O) Adverbials typically express place or direction main and subordinate clauses 1. Mary had been waiting for more than an hour 2. Suddenly, she stood up and went out 3. She said that she was not feeling well because the air in the room was stuffy 4. She wanted to get some fresh air • a main clause always contains a finite verb and typically contains an overt subject • a subordinate clause cannot stand alone and needs to be attached to a free-standing clause • a non-finite clause is always subordinate • simple clauses consist of a clause, compound clauses consist of two coordinate clauses, complex clauses consist of a main and one or more subordinate clauses. Types of Clauses typical functions of clause types Form declarative interrogative imperative exclamative Function statement question directive exclamation You’re wearing a new dress. Are you wearing a new dress? Buy yourself a new dress! What a lovely dress you’re wearing! declarative clauses • declarative clauses are normally used to make statements • declarative sentences typically have an overt subject, a verb element and any necessary verb complementation • declarative sentences may also have optional adverbials Philip will see his dentist in London today interrogative clauses • yes-no questions: Are you happy? • wh- questions: Where do you live? • question-tag : She’s Australian, isn’t she? She doesn’t love him, does she? So, you have changed your mind, have you? • the interrogative structure implies a subject-operator inversion • any auxiliary which is used to make interrogative sentences is labelled operator (be, have, do) • questions tags may have contrastive or constant polarity marked structures: clefting • to highlight a particular element of the sentence • the focussed element is introduced by a dummy Subject and followed by a relative clause it-cleft structure Terry plays jazz piano for fun. It is Terry who plays jazz piano for fun. It’s jazz piano that Terry plays for fun It’s for fun that Terry plays jazz piano The man hit the boy It was the man who hit the boy wh-cleft structure I would like a book for my birthday What I would like for my birthday is a book I want a book for Christmas What I want for Christmas is a book sentence • the largest unit of syntactic structure • a sentence must consist of at least one clause (main clause) I agreed to go with them although I wasn’t really happy with the idea. • in writing, a sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a full stop • in speech sentences are not always complete types of subordinate clauses 1. 2. 3. 4. Nominal I just hope (that) they will understand Relative The man who is sitting next to Tom is John Adverbial Call me as soon as you get home (time) because I have to talk to you (reason). The boy stood on the box so that he could see better (purpose). Even though I am tired (concession), I’ll do it. Comparative This hotel is not as nice as I expected types of relative clauses In what ways do the following relative clauses differ? which relative pronouns can be used in each context? This is the best hotel (that, which, who, whom, whose, zero pronoun) I was able to find This hotel, (which, that, who, whose, whom, zero pronoun) was renewed last year, is one of the best in the city The man (which, that, who, whose, whom, zero pronoun) you see in the photo is my brother The man (which, that, who, whose, whom, zero pronoun) is coming towards us is my brother The music (that, which, who, whose, whom, zero article) we are listening to is Mozart We stayed in a lovely hotel, (which, that, who, whom, whose) owner is a good friend of mine We stayed in a lovely hotel, (which, that, who, whom, whose) we booked on the Internet rule of relative clauses Relative clauses can be either defining (or restrictive) or nondefining (non-restrictive) depending on whether they define the antecedent or add extra information (no commas) The tourists who got up early could see the dawn on the Nile The use of relative pronouns is conditioned by the antecedent, whether it is human ( who,whom, whose, that) or non-human (that, whose, which), whether it plays the role of subject (who, that, which) or object (whom, that, which, zero pronoun), whether it is defining (who, whose, whom, that, which) or non-defining (who, whose, which). (commas are required) The tourists, who got up early, could see the dawn on the Nile conditional sentences 0) If you don’t water plants, they die (obvious) 1) If the weather is nice, tomorrow we will go to the seaside (it is an open possibility) * If the weather will be nice, … 2) If the weather were/was nice, we would go to the seaside (it is unlikely) *If the weather would be nice, 3) If the weather had been nice, we would have gone to the seaside (it did not happen) • My friends sent me an invitation to their wedding. • I put some poison for the mice in the garage. • Chris made Sara really angry yesterday. • Yesterday the doctor told the patient the good news • The car keys are on the table. • The cash machine is faulty. The English Lexicon: From Words to Phraseology PART 1. Brainstorming on lexis PART 2. The English lexicon: general features some old and new concepts and terms word/word-form/lexeme grammatical word/lexical word vocabulary/lexis/(the) lexicon entry/headword/lemma lexicology/lexicography phraseology semantics Lexical level lexical level = word level vocabulary: to talk about words collectively (e.g. large vocabulary, small vocabulary) lexis: to talk about the vocabulary of a specific variety (e.g. English lexis, Italian lexis) lexicon: to indicate a list of words with additional information (e.g. computer lexicon, mental lexicon) lexis is dynamic Three processes of lexical innovation: 1. the creation of completely new words (coinage) e.g. computing terms google (search through Google engine) neet= not in education, employment or training 2. the borrowing of words from other languages (loanwords) e.g. Anglicisms in Italian (spam) e.g. Italianisms in English (spaghetti) 3 word formation processes internal to the language (derivational morphology), e.g. prefixes, suffixes, compounding, semantic shift, etc. e.g. “to zap” from “moving quickly” to “ keeping changing TV programmes with a remote control” lexis is the level of language most rapidly and deeply affected by social, historical and cultural change meaning is complex the relationship between “things” and “words” some words imitate sounds (onomatopoeic) but most words have an arbitrary connection with “things” miagolare chicchiricchì to mew/to miaow cock-a-doodle-do acqua water/wasser/eau defining word meaning may prove difficult William Shakespeare is … … a famous English playwright of the 16th century … the greatest playwright of all times … the author of Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet and many other tragedies and comedies … the father of British theatre … a writer of the Modern English period … my favourite dramatist etc. words refer to, or denote, entities in the world, but this relationship (reference) can be expressed in different ways defining the adjective “honest” A person who is honest does not tell lies, cheat people or violate the law A person who is honest always tells the truth, respects other people, obeys the law and pays taxes Someone who is honest can always be trusted Someone who is honest does not hide things from you Someone who is honest can be trusted with valuables and money etc. the meaning of words can be culturally conditioned defining the noun “bird” A bird is… … an animal with the body covered in/with feathers, with two wings and a beak, which is able to fly. Female birds lay eggs. … an animal with feathers, two legs and two wings, which is able to fly. But what about penguins and ostriches? We conceive a general image, a mental PROTOTYPE based on our experience and containing the most distinctive characteristics of the class. Some members are less central than others. “butterfly” Butterflies live only one day She is a butterfly when she dances words denote objects and concepts, but may have emotional or stylistic connotations words can be used in a figurative sense (metaphorical) e.g. I’m a domestic god/goddess! denotation and connotation words refer to, or denote, objects and concepts e.g. lion: a wild animal living in Africa words have stylistic and emotional connotations e.g. He was a lion (courageous) Different types of lexemes 1. The computer is an electronic machine which is used for storing, organizing and finding different types of information some words have only one referent or meaning (monoreferential) 2a Mary is a great host 2b The host represents the body of Christ some words have different unrelated meanings (homonymic) 3a. I saw a mouse running around the kitchen floor 3b. I’ve just bought a brand new mouse for my PC some words have several related meanings (polysemous) the nature of lexemes affects the organisation of entries in dictionaries Semantic links between words 1. freedom vs. liberty (near)-synonymy 2. black vs. white; fast vs. slow; brother vs. sister; married vs. single antonymy (or complementarity) 3. flowers, roses, daffodils, violets, tulips, daisies hyperonymy (superordinates) and hyponymy (subordinates) 4. cook, roast, simmer, fry, bake, boil, barbecue, etc. semantic field Collocations and phraseology 1. I would like to win a post-graduate scholarship to do research (not *to make research) 2. How do you do? 3. The ups and downs of life (not *the downs and ups) 4. The early bird catches the worm (not *the early cat catches the mouse) 5. Torrential/heavy rain in Bangladesh (not *strong rain) 6. He has spilled the beans (not *spilled the peas) 7. Headache (not *pain in the head) “words keep company with other words” and tend to cooccur in preferred or fixed collocations (Sinclair’s idiom principle versus open-choice principle ) Lexis is dynamic refers to the external world refers to mental concepts has emotional and stylistic connotations has one or several referents and meanings relates to other words in the language may co-occur with other words in fixed or semi-fixed patterns What does knowing a word mean? receptive vs. productive competence Part II The English lexicon How many words are there in English? The problematic notion of words does not make it easy to count them There are different ways of counting words: 1. dictionaries 2. corpora 3. speakers’ competence Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language (1755) about 42,000 entries LEXICO’GRAPHER. n.s. [? lixicographe, French.] A writer of dictionories; a harmless drudge, that busies himself in tracing the original, and detailing the signification of words. The Oxford English Dictionary on Historical Principles (OED) OED features The project started in the second half of the 19th century It covers English since the 14th century The second print edition in 20 volumes + 4 additions has 616,500 headwords and derived words and phrases A CD-ROM and an online version, which is regularly updated, are also available www.oed.com OED: a selection from the entry “spaghetti” [It., pl. of spaghetto thin string, twine.] 1. a. A variety of pasta made in long thin strings. Occas., a dish of spaghetti. 1888 MRS. BEETON Bk. Househ. Managem. §2952 Maccheroni, or Spaghetti, a smaller kind of macaroni,..generally follows the soup. 2. An Italian: usu. contemptuous. slang. 1931 ‘D. STIFF’ Milk & Honey Route iii. 38 Italian hobos are equally rare. They are the ‘wops’ or ‘spaghettis’. 3. Complex roadways forming a multi-level junction, esp. on a motorway. colloq 1966 Guardian 4 June 14/2 Details of one of the biggest pieces of motorway spaghetti so far designed in Britain were published ... Merriam-Webster’s Third New International Dictionary: the American counterpart to the OED Webster’s It covers American English since the 18th century Its 1963 edition contains about 114,000 word families (a headword accompanied by its inflected and derived forms) It is regularly updated. There are several print editions and an online edition, which is freely available www.m-w.com other types of dictionaries in size (college dictionaries, desk dictionaries, pocket dictionaries) in addressees (learner’s dictionaries, from 60,000 to 80,000 entries, or for native speakers ) in contents (general or specialised, varieties of English) in number of languages (monolingual, bilingual, multilingual) learners’ dictionaries 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Spelling variants IPA phonetic transcription Grammatical and syntactic information Information on frequency Definitions of various senses Examples of usage Sense relations, e.g. antonymy Register labels (e.g formal, slang) Frequent lexical collocations Usage notes Typical learners’ errors Use of colours, symbols and figures Special sections electronic corpora corpora are collections of text in electronic form that are meant to represent a language, or a register of it several corpora are available for English that can be analysed through specific software in terms of frequency and use of words in context e.g. The British National Corpus (BNC) The Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA) What are the most frequently used words in English? from the BNC 11. 12. 13. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. the of and a in to it is to was determiner preposition conjunction determiner preposition infinitive pronoun verb preposition verb 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. I for that you he be with on at by pronoun preposition conjunction pronoun pronoun verb preposition preposition preposition preposition grammatical words are the most frequently used frequency of lexical words (BNC) The 10 most frequent nouns are time, year, people, way, man, day, thing, child, Mr, government The most commonly mentioned animal is horse, followed by dog The 10 most frequent adjectives are other, good, new, old, great, high, small, different, large, local The most frequently mentioned colours are black, white, red and green (the order coincides with the hierarchy of colors which scholars have observed in many languages) The top ten frequency adverbs are never, always, often, ever, sometimes, usually, once, generally, hardly, no longer rarer nouns are fax, ribbon, ant, colitis, wheat, spelling, holly, monarch, voltage, morale rarer adjectives are rude, faithful, ministerial, innovative, controlled, conceptual, unwilling, civic, meaningful disturbing How many words do native speakers of English know? It depends on variables such as age, education and use (receptive or productive) According to research a two-year old child: very limited vocabulary but growing at great speed an English university student: 20,000 word families an adult educated speaker: 50,000 lexemes The mixed nature of English lexis: Germanic vs. Romance words PDE is made of a core (about 40%) of high-frequency Germanic words that are usually short and refer to common actions and concepts (e.g. man, woman, day, child, bread, to go, to get, phrasal verbs) and a wider component (about 60%) of less frequently used words of classical or Romance origin which are usually longer and used in specialised or formal contexts (e.g. encyclopaedia, tonsillectomy, parliament, infrastructure) Germanic/Romance near-synonyms discover e.g. Columbus discovered a new continent find out e.g. Her parents found out that she had a boyfriend continue e.g. The treatment has to be continued for 4 weeks go on e.g. We can’t go on like this any longer pig/cow = the living animal pork/beef = the meat you eat regal, royal e.g. royal family, regal powers kingly e.g. kingly manner return come back “true” and “false friends” between Italian and English similarity may help (true friends) e.g. problem, result, company, million, community similarity may be misleading (false friends) e.g. actually, eventually, argument, factory, educated, lecture, library, magazine English loans in Italian and other European languages From a “borrowing language” English has become a “donor language”. Why? In present-day Italian there are many different types of Anglicisms and people have different attitudes toward this phenomenon. What is happening in other languages? Comment on the following Anglicisms in Italian. Do they have an Italian counterpart? film, mission, management, welfare, governance, briefing, week-end, pub, scannerizzare, mouse, computer, talk-show, report, devolution, boom, impeachment, ghost writer escort 1 person or a group of people or vehicles that go somewhere with someone to protect them or prevent them from escaping 2 someone, especially a man, who goes with another person to a formal social event as their partner 2a someone who is paid to go out socially with another person. Escort is sometimes used as a polite way of referring to a prostitute (Macmillan English Dictionary 2007) escort 1. sost. m. e f. inv., accompagnatore turistico. 2. sost .f. inv., donna giovane e avvenente che partecipa, a pagamento, a cene, serate in locali notturni e sim., non escludendo a priori rapporti sessuali mercenari. sin. hostess. (GDU 2007) shopping look baby-sitter body building coffee break team match coach sprint snowboard record goal > > > < < < > > > > spese aspetto bambinaia culturismo pausa caffè squadra partita allenatore scatto tavola primato rete variation in English 1. user-related variation e.g. geographical area (the UK, the USA, etc.), age, education 2. use-related variation or register model what is talked about (field or topic) the medium used (e.g. spoken/written, electronic language) the relationship between speakers/writers, e.g. formal, informal (personal tenor) Some lexical differences between BrE and AmE 1. He lives in a lovely apartment in New York AmE/flat BrE 2. The autumn term will start in September BrE /fall AmE 3. Where can I find a gas station? AmE/petrol (BrE) 4. 11/9/2001 BrE 9/11/2001 AmE Register variation Tonsillectomy is needed The doctor recommended that you remove/take out your tonsils Influenza A/H1N1 broke out in Mexico last year Swine flu broke out in Mexico last year These are my children These are my kids This is my offspring core/basic vocabulary Choose the most neutral and general lexeme to refer to someone “who has very little fat on his/her body”and, with the help of dictionaries, identify the differences in meaning: emaciated, skinny, slender, lean, slim, thin word-formation processes 1. 2. 3. 4. compounding or compounds two or more free lexemes are joined to form a new word (with a new meaning) e.g. schoolday, day school (not a boarding school) affixation one or more bound derivational lexemes are added to a free morpheme either at the beginning or at the end e.g. e-mail, childish, childhood, kingdom conversion or zero derivation a change of word class without a change in form e.g. bottle (noun)/to bottle (verb), hard (adj. adv.) acronym or initialism the initial letters of a complex expression e.g. AIDS = Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome SCUBA = Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus 5. clipping by eliminating the beginning and/or the end of a lexeme e.g. flu/influenza 6. blending or blends the merging of two words into one e.g. glocal = global + local, motel = motor + hotel 7. semantic change or shift the change of meaning of existing lexemes “to zap” from “moving quickly” to “keeping changing TV programmes with a remote control” some observations on compounds 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. a blackbird/a black bird un merlo/un uccello nero compounds vs. noun phrases bedroom/paperback endocentric, exocentric mother-in-law, forget-me-not, state-of-the-art, sell-by date multi-word compounds green tea, checklist, user-friendly different ways of writing compounds: two words, one word (solid compounds), hyphenated green card, user-friendly, handout (v. and n.) different word classes (nouns, adjectives, verbs) Observe the differences between English and Italian compounds 1. 2. 3. 4. green tea tè verde trademark marchio di fabbrica zero tolerance tolleranza zero coffee break pausa caffè some prefixes and suffixes unhappy, incomplete immorality, non-morality maltreat, miscalculate pro-Obama, antiwar postmodern, recycle bilingual, polyglot multitask, multifunctional prefixes are usually class maintaining and affect meaning in many ways (e.g. opposite, pejorative, attitude, time) trainer, reader (nouns) trainee, employee formation, pollution socialism, liberalism kindness, happiness reliable, eligible (adjectives) faithful, beautiful useless, careless specialize/se, advertise (verbs) honestly, carefully (adverbs) suffixes form nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs, and are usually class-changing some old and new affixes ecology, ecosystem, ecodiversity psychology, morphology, biology Europhile, Europhobe, Eurocrats many prefixes and suffixes are of classical origin (neo-classical affixes) workaholic, chocaholic -aholic from work+alcoholic; chocolate+alcoholic Cartergate, Camillagate, Katrinagate, sexgate -gate from the Watergate scandal involving the American president Richard Nixon in the 1970s e-mail, e-commerce, e-business some new affixes are linked to recent trends and events conversion or zero derivation bottle (noun)/to bottle (verb) to download (verb)/download (noun) dry (adjective)/to dry (verb) round: adjective, preposition, adverb, noun, verb very common process in PDE because of the reduction of morphology read and recognize the following acronyms or initialisms IT Information Technology WWW World Wide Web BBC British Broadcasting Corporation IRA Irish Republican Army VIP Very Important Person RAM Random Access Memory NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization acronyms are read as words whereas in initialisms each letter is read independently phraseological phenomena According to the linguist John Sinclair, there are two different principles in language: the IDIOM PRINCIPLE refers to the existence in language of multi-word lexical patterns that are units of meaning the OPEN-CHOICE PRINCIPLE refers to the part of language that functions according to predictable grammatical rules types of “prefabricated language” social routines (or pragmatic idioms) e.g. see you later, I’m looking forward to hearing from you, Have a good day, Can I help you? discourse organisers e.g. in other words, to sum up, first of all, for example, e.g. (exempli gratia), i.e. (id est) idioms e.g. to beat about the bush, to kill two birds with one stone binomials e.g. back and forth, pros and cons, bed and breakfast proverbs e.g. A friend in need is a friend indeed, Too many cooks spoil the broth, The more the merrier simile e.g. As ugly as sin slogans and famous quotations e.g. Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country ( J. F. Kennedy) Yes, we can (B. Obama) from transparent to idiomatic (opaque) expressions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. to see the light at the end of the tunnel to give someone the green light white wine white lie to take up knitting it’s a piece of cake it’s my cup of tea to go Dutch lexical collocations a pervasive feature in English and a major difficulty for learners Fammi un favore Un edificio umido Do me a favour A damp building Fammi una torta Make me a cake Un clima molto caldo e umido Sono stanco morto A hot and humid climate I’m dead tired Occhi umidi Era ubriaco fradicio Moist eyes He was dead drunk from “frozen” to restricted lexical collocations 1. He shrugged his shoulders He nodded his head He shook his finger 2. He is growing a beard He is growing vegetables *He is growing his children (He is bringing up his children) lexical collocation the preferred co-occurrence of two lexemes that belong to two different word classes and retain their independent meaning a word “keeping company” with another word for reasons other than grammatical ones e.g. to take up/start/pursue a career *to make career open questions in lexicology 1. Eskimos have many words to refer to different types of snow. What does it mean? 2. Is there a close link between the character of a language and the spirit of a nation (W. von Humboldt 1767-1835)? 3. Does a language determine its speakers’ world view (Sapir and Whorf’s cultural relativism, 20th century)? words reflect changes in society HI-FI, TRANSISTOR, VIDEOTAPE (in the 1950s) GREEN/GLOBAL WARMING/CHAIRPERSON (in the 1970s) WEBSITE/WORLD WIDE WEB (in the 1990s) TWEET (2012) Computing: a rapidly developing terminology 1. program, window, menu, mouse, address, disk, bug, spam words borrowed from general language and acquiring a specialised meaning 2. floppy disk, hard disk, blog (from web + log), modem (from modulator + demodulator), download, search engine, to google word formation processes 3. CD-ROM (Compact Disk Read Only Memory), FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) acronyms and abbreviations political correctness: some taboo areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. negro (nigger), black, Afro-American, African-American Mr, Mrs, Ms chairman, chairwoman, chairperson, chair lawyer, lady lawyer, woman lawyer husband and wife, acompanying person, spouse, partner disabled, handicapped, differently able, physically impaired to be politically correct means to refer to different ethnic and social groups in a respectful and accepted way the most sensitive areas are race, gender, religion, the human body and death the debate started in the USA in the 1970s and it is rather controversial The future of English lexis PDE lexis will accept considerable geographical variation (e.g. AmE , BrE, Indian English, Caribbean English) but will be shared by global communities of scientists, professionals and Internet users (English as a Lingua Franca)