Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Language (Bloomfield book) Language and Linguistics; Language, Meaning and Context; Language: An Introduction to the Study of Speech; Language: Introductory Readings; Linguistic Semantics: An Introduction; Linguistics and Language; Linguistics: A Very Short Introduction; Linguistics: An Introduction to Language and Communication
The book was reviewed by Judith W. Lindfors, Adam Glaz and Geoffrey Horrocks. [1] [2] [3] Peter Ladefoged calls it a "successful book" whose success lies in its clarity and the wide range of topics covered. [4]
Analogy plays an important role in child language acquisition.The relationship between language acquisition and language change is well established, [2] and while both adult speakers and children can be innovators of morphophonetic and morphosyntactic change, [3] analogy used in child language acquisition likely forms one major source of analogical change.
This category is for books on linguistics and its subfields. For dictionaries of specific languages, please use Category:Dictionaries by language . Wikimedia Commons has media related to Books about linguistics .
This article about a book on language, linguistics or translation is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Linguistics and Language: A Survey of Basic Concepts and Implications is a textbook by Julia S. Falk in which the author provides an introduction to linguistics. It is a well-known introductory text in linguistics.
In linguistics, the term semantic domain refers to an abstract space containing all the 'meanings' of every term in a language. Since multiple words can have the same meaning, the semantic domain can also be thought of as grouping the terms based on meaning.
Use in cognitive linguistics and construction grammar [ edit ] The theory applies the notion of a semantic frame also used in artificial intelligence , which is a collection of facts that specify "characteristic features, attributes, and functions of a denotatum, and its characteristic interactions with things necessarily or typically ...