An Introduction to Language offers an engaging guide to
the nature of language, focusing on how language works – its
sounds, words, structures, and phrases – all investigated
through wide-ranging examples from Old English to contemporary pop
culture.
* Explores the idea of a scientific approach to language,
inviting students to consider what qualities of language comprise
everyday skills for us, be they sounds, words, phrases, or
conversation
* Helps shape our understanding of what language is, how
it works, and why it is both elegantly complex and essential
to who we are
* Includes exercises within each chapter to help readers explore
key concepts and directly observe the patterns that are part of all
human language
* Examines linguistic variation and change to illustrate social
nuances and language-in-use, drawing primarily on examples from
English
* Avoids linguistic jargon, focusing instead on a broader and
more general approach to the study of language, and making it ideal
for those coming to the subject for the first time
* Supported by additional web resources – available upon
publication at href=’http://www.wiley.com/go/hazen/introlanguage’>www.wiley.com/go/hazen/introlanguage
– including student study aids and testbank and notes for
instructors
Innehållsförteckning
Companion Website xiv
Acknowledgments xv
Note to Instructors xvii
Preface: About the Book xix
1 Introduction 1
2 Sounds 31
3 Patterns of Sounds 73
4 Simple Words in the Lexicon 109
5 Idioms, Slang, and the English Lexicon 147
6 Words Made of Many Parts 177
7 Putting Pieces Together 217
8 Building Bigger Phrases 249
9 From Phrases to Meaning 295
10 The Winding Paths of Language in Education 327
11 The Life Cycles of Language 361
Glossary 395
Index 421
Om författaren
Kirk Hazen is Professor of Linguistics at West Virginia University. He is co-editor of Research Methods in Sociolinguistics (with Janet Holmes, Wiley-Blackwell, 2013).