Language, Culture, and Society: A Book of ReadingsBen G. Blount "Twenty-four articles representing a diversity of interests and approaches have been brought together in this revised collection intended to define and develop topics of central interest to language, culture, and society. Opening pieces include enduring, classic writings by Boas, Sapir, Whorf, Mead, and others, giving the volume an important historical orientation. These contributions form the ground-work for the wide sampling of more recent and contemporary works that follows." -- Back cover. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 81
Page 214
... rules ( G ) must be incorporated into pragmatics ( G ′ ) , that is , that at least some speech acts consist of rules showing the contextual dependence of traditional grammatical rules for generating surface forms . This is further ...
... rules ( G ) must be incorporated into pragmatics ( G ′ ) , that is , that at least some speech acts consist of rules showing the contextual dependence of traditional grammatical rules for generating surface forms . This is further ...
Page 301
... rules , " so that unique sen- tences can be produced and understood by speakers in the same speech com- munity . Currently , performance models are beginning to be developed which can account for speech , imitation , comprehension , and ...
... rules , " so that unique sen- tences can be produced and understood by speakers in the same speech com- munity . Currently , performance models are beginning to be developed which can account for speech , imitation , comprehension , and ...
Page 357
... Rules for Diversity William Labov has begun to use his large collection of material on speech of different New York City groups to discover rules accounting both for stylistic and intergroup diversity quantitatively . He has been able ...
... Rules for Diversity William Labov has begun to use his large collection of material on speech of different New York City groups to discover rules accounting both for stylistic and intergroup diversity quantitatively . He has been able ...
Contents
American Indian Languages | 9 |
Edward Sapir The Unconscious Patterning | 29 |
Edward Sapir Language | 43 |
Copyright | |
22 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activities American analysis anthropology Boas caregivers child classification cognitive color communication complex concepts consciousness context contrast defined dialect discourse distinct Edward Sapir elements English ethnographic ethnoscience example experience expression fact formal function gender genre grammatical Gumperz Hanunóo Hemnes Hopi human Hymes important indexical Indian individual Indo-European languages interaction interpretation intertextual Kaluli Khalapur kind language and culture lexemes lexical linguistic linguistic anthropology mass nouns meaning metapragmatic Mexicano mode morphemes nature Navaho notion nouns objects organization parental speech participants particular patterns person phenomena phonetic plural polysemous pragmatic Press problem psychology reference referential relations relationship responses ritual role rules Sahaptin Samoan Sapir Sapir-Whorf hypothesis semantic significant situation society sociolinguistic speakers speaking specific speech acts speech events structure symbolic talk thought tion Tzeltal unconscious University usage utterances verb verbal vocabulary Whorf words