Unit-7 1702666938
Unit-7 1702666938
Unit-7 1702666938
Nature of Language
A language consists of words, idioms and syntax. It is through language that we think,
feel, judge and express. Hence language is one of the most important and characteristic
forms of human behaviour. We use words and idioms as tools to perform and share
experiences.
1. Language is speech – Language is speech and is distinct from the signs, gestures and
sounds produced by animals or pets to convey a particular feeling or emotion. It is
distinct from sign language even amongst humans at any point of social and biological
evolution. It restricts itself to recognised expression and communication to or from
human beings by means of speech and hearing. This communication, therefore, has to be
from man to man, from a person to another person by means of speech, and hearing.
Speech, therefore, is language.
3. Language and Society – “Language is one of the most important and characteristic
forms of human behaviour”. With the widening range and horizon of human thought and
action, language has to keep in step with its social calling. As “language is activity, a
purposeful activity”, it must help man to express himself in a variety of new and different
kinds of situations. It is the society, that in its turn, bestows meaning towards idioms by
conventionalising them to mean what they mean today to a group or a community, in a
variety of complex contexts.
5. Sounds and Signals – Sounds produced by human beings differ from the ‘signal-like’
sounds and actions of the animals. A lot of research is going on to establish if the animals
also have similar conventionalised arrangement in their expression. According to
Bloomfield, “In human speech, different sounds have different meanings. To study this
coordination of certain sounds with certain meanings is to study language”.
Functions of a Language:
1. Social Function – It has been said time and again that language is social. It operates in a
social setting, it acquires meaning and significance in a social interaction. It is a means of
communication between members of a community. It is “capable of handling all
references and meanings” (Sapir) of a given culture. It is a means of expression.
2. Cultural Function – As “language is a part of the culture of people and the chief means
by which the members of a society communicate”, it is wedded to culture, is inseparable
from it and, hence performs a cultural function. The content of every culture is express
able in its language.
3. Language and the Individual – As a symbolic system, language either reports to, refers
to or substitutes for, direct experience. Whatever the case may be, language cannot
“stand apart from or run parallel to direct experience, but completely interpenetrates
with it.”
4. The Expressive Function – Language is a great force of socialisation. “language is
primarily a vocal actualisation of the tendency to see realities symbolically”.
There cannot be any meaningful social interaction without language. The language binds
the people into one large group called a nation. The national language socialises the
behaviour of the whole nation, whereas, the regional languages help integrate regional
groups. Language is the greatest and most potent force of integration.
5. Aesthetic Aspect- Language helps store culture experiences in the form of literature
and other written records for posterity. These cultural experiences form the nexus of
individual realisation. It breathes life into our poets and dramatists. Short of a language,
such fine arts were not possible. Aesthetic experiences are the treasure for the posterity
to feel proud of it as a national treasure-house.
ORIGIN OF LANGUAGES
There are two main hypothesis concerning the origin of language-
There are several hypotheses as to how language might have been consciously invented
by humans, which are divided into two sets:
A. The IMITATION HYPOTHESES – believe that language began through some sort of
human mimicry of natural occurring sounds or movements. Some of them are:
While mentioning human evolution, it is discussed that the evolution of hominids was
accompanied by increase in brain size. Modification of cerebral cortex is one of the
changes occurred over time. This part is related to memory and symbolic and cultural
capacities. Human brain is divided into two hemispheres, left and right. The left
hemisphere controls specialised functions related to linguistic abilities. This area
of the brain is known as Broca’s area. It is associated with the production of sound or
pronunciation and with grammatical abilities. Wernicke’s area in the left hemisphere is also
related to linguistic abilities. It is associated with the ability to understand the meaning of
words and sentences or the semantics of language. This centre of the brain is important for
listening and reading.
Human Brain
No animal other than human has the anatomical features, suitable for speech production.
Human vocal organs form an irregular tube connecting the lungs, windpipe and larynx.
Larynx is the voice box containing the vocal cords. Another vocal organ is the Pharynx. It
is the part of the vocal tract between the back of the tongue and the larynx. It extends into
the nasal cavity.The larynx serves to hold air in the lungs and to control its release. These
vocal organs work in connection with the tongue, lips and nose to produce speech. The
nasal cavity, lips and tongue can regulate or stop the flow of air at any point. It helps us to
make vowel and consonant sounds.
In the case of vocal organs, the major difference between chimpanzees and modern humans
is the lower position of the larynx and consequent lengthening of the upper vocal tract in
humans. This change is said to have occurred through evolution. It has enabled humans to
speak languages.Of course, these biological modifications helped us to speak. But a
commonly assigned meaning to particular sound and sound patterns were also
indispensable for linguistic communication.
Characteristics of Language
• Language is learned — The learning process may be natural or structured.
• Language is a system—The complexity of the various facets of it are organically
inter-related, such as, sounds, words and structures integrated with one another and
constitute the complex and organic whole which is called language.
• Language is a system of symbols —Its effectiveness consists in its usage when the
symbols are commonly shared and known to all those who are sharing a common
experience.
• The system is arbitrary—There is no logical relation between the words and the objects
they stand for except for the Chinese and the other pictorial languages. Here again, the
characters, though pictorial, do have any resemblance with the reality that they stand
for. However, in sound languages, it is necessary that the sounds have a specific
meaning.
• Language symbols are vocal—Language is primarily speech- Oriented. Its graphical
representation comes later. In many languages there is no graphical expression at all.
They are only spoken and are considered adequate as they perform the basic function of
communication.
• Language is relevant in a social setting and has meaning as far as it expresses common
cultural experiences. Languages, therefore, differ because cultures differ.
• Language is a unique feature of humans.
Language Acquisition
There are different views regarding the acquisition of language. One of the widely
accepted proposition was put forth by an American linguist Noam Chomsky. Noam
Chomsky examines how people acquire grammar. Most people actually cannot state the
rules of language. But they use these rules to form understandable sentences. According to
Chomsky, all children acquire these complex rules readily. They do not feel any difficulty
in producing meaningful statements even though they did not learn the grammar rules.
Thus, Chomsky proposes that humans are born with a brain pre-wired that enables
language acquisition. Chomsky calls this pre-wiring as Universal Grammar. The universal
grammar serves like a model. The universal grammar of human mind helps the child to
acquire any language and to produce sentences never heard before. Anthropologists had
earlier assumed that languages could vary in different areas. Chomsky also opines that
there is a critical period for the acquisition of language. It is the period for the acquisition
of language between birth and the starting of puberty. During this time language
acquisition must happen. If children are not acquainted with language, during this period,
they may never be able to acquire it. Or they may be able to learn language only in its
rudimentary form.
Types of Communication
Verbal Communication:
Verbal communication is the sharing of information between two individuals using
words. It is the use of auditory language to exchange information with other people. It
includes sounds, words, or speaking. The tone, volume, and pitch of one’s voice can all
contribute to effective verbal communication.
Types of Verbal Communication:
1. Formal versus Informal: We use spoken communication informally while we use
written communication formally.
2. Synchronous versus Asynchronous: Synchronous communication is
communication that takes place in real time, such as a conversation with a friend.
In contrast, asynchronous communication is communication that is not immediate
and occurs over longer periods of time, such as letters, email, or even text
messages.
3. Recorded versus Unrecorded: Written communication is generally archived and
recorded for later retrieval while spoken communication is generally not.
There are more than 5000 languages distributed throughout the world. But a large number
of these languages have disappeared over time. Perhaps the most powerful force for
linguistic change is the domination of one society over another. Five hundred years of
European colonisation was one such instance. In many cases, foreign political control has
resulted in linguistic erosion or a complete disappearance of a language.
The extinction of each language results in the irrecoverable loss of unique cultural,
historical, and ecological knowledge. Each language is a unique expression of the human
experience of the world. Thus, the knowledge of any single language may be the key to
answering fundamental questions of the future. Every time a language dies, we have less
evidence for understanding patterns in the structure and function of human
language, human prehistory, and the maintenance of the world’s diverse ecosystems.
Above all, speakers of these languages may experience the loss of their language as a loss
of their original ethnic and cultural identity (Bernard 1992, Hale 1998).
It is estimated that over the last 500 years, about 3500 languages have become
extinct. In Western Europe, hundreds of languages disappeared due to the expansion of
agricultural empires. Rulers of these empires imposed their language on conquered people.
In the course of the expansion of the Roman Empire many tribal languages disappeared.
They were replaced by Latin. When Columbus discovered America, there existed more
than 2000 languages among different Native American people. But most of these local
languages disappeared due to the Spanish and British invasion of this area. Different
factors like warfare, epidemics or forced assimilation may have been the cause for it.
Anthropologists predict that the number of languages spoken today will be reduced to half
by the year 2100.
Children born in ethnic minority groups are no longer using their ancestral language
at schools or workplaces. In complex societies, there is the tendency to learn and practice
a single commonly shared language. Flourishing of information technology, popularisation
of internet and short messages in cell phones promote global spread of one common
language, English. It helps people from different ethnic backgrounds to communicate. But
there is the risk of the disappearance of other languages too. Today, internet content exists
only in a limited number of languages.
The Internet really is a powerful tool for maintaining and enhancing disappearing
languages.UNESCO has started some positive steps to ensure linguistic and cultural
diversity. Promotion of multilingualism on the internet is one among them. It helped to
bridge the digital divide.
Linguistic anthropologists advocate bilingualism. Along with using the common language,
natives are to be encouraged to use their own language.We all share the responsibility of
ensuring that no language disappears and that all languages are maintained and perpetuated
for the future generations.
Characteristics of non-verbal communication:
Non-verbal communication is any information that is communicated without using
words. The important characteristics of non-verbal communication are as follows:
1. No use of words: Non-verbal communication is a communication without words
or language, unlike oral or written communication. It uses gestures, facial
expressions, eye contact, physical proximity, touching, etc. for communicating
with others.
2. Culturally determined: Non-verbal communication is learned in childhood, passed
on to you by your parents and others with whom you associate. Through this
process of growing up in a particular society, you adopt the taints and
mannerisms of your cultural group.
3. Different meaning: Non-verbal symbols can have many meanings. Cross-culture
aspects give various meanings to the same expression in respect of non-verbal
communication.
4. Vague and imprecise: Non-verbal communication is quite vague and imprecise.
Since in this communication, there is no use of words or language which
expresses clear meaning to the receiver.
5. May conflict with verbal message: Non-verbal communication is so deeply rooted,
so unconscious, that you can express a verbal message and then directly
contradict it with a nonverbal message.
6. Largely unconscious: Non-verbal communication is unconscious in the sense that
it is usually not planned nor rehearsed. It comes almost instantaneously.
7. Shows feelings and attitudes: Facial expressions, gestures, body movements, the
way you use your eyes – all communicate your feelings and emotions to others.
8. Informality: Nonverbal communication does not follow any rules, formality or
structure like other communication. In most cases people unconsciously and
habitually engage in non-verbal communication by moving the various parts of
the body.
Pidgin and Creole Languages
The structure and content of language to a great extent are influenced by culture. We
can say that linguistic diversity is the result of cultural diversity. According to Overton
Brent Berlin, a famous American Anthropologist, the increase in the number of words
indicates the cultural complexity. Language reflects cultural situations. The socialisation
process of a child is also influenced by language. The status of people, their living
conditions, their environment and the way of subsistence can be understood through
languages. The study of the relationship between language and culture, and how they
mutually influence each other is examined under the sub-discipline Ethno-linguistics. It
examines how a language reflects the traditional natural environment. Ethno-linguists, in
their interaction with the group under study, learn to understand the prevailing social
cultural situation. Relationship between Culture and language can be well understood
through the examination of the following areas:
2. Language indicates Social Roles and Statuses: In your local language, there may
be different words to denote ‘death’ of a person. The use of these terms may vary
according to caste, gender, age and social status. Likewise persons in different
religious sects use different terms. It is important to remember that languages are
spoken by members of different societies. All societies have their own unique
cultures. So Individuals in different societies use language based on social
categories such as gender, age, class, caste, and ethnicity. Socio-linguistics
studies the relationship between language and society. It examines how social
categories influence the use of speech. Thus, it is concerned with the
ethnography of speaking. It examines cultural and sub-cultural patterns of speech
variation in different social contexts.
4. Language helps to share Cultural Symbols: One of the features of culture is its
nature of shared practice. To ensure this sharing in society, we require the
medium of language. We learn the beliefs and practices of our culture through
language.