(isim) dilbilim

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Türkçe - İngilizce
linguistics
the science of languages, or of the origin, history, and significance of words
Arts or Social Sciences
The formal study of languages In English linguistics is broken into the following major areas of study; phonology, the study of phonemes the basic components of sound in spoken language, morphology, the smallest meaningful components of words, syntax, the rules or grammar of language and semantics, the meaning of language Syntax is an important component of Neuro-Linguistic Programming as the order and sequence of utterances has a profound effect on the meaning of what is said
Scientific study of language Modern linguistics emphasizes descriptive accuracy and observation of actual utterances
{i} scientific study of language
the study of language in general and of particular languages, their structure, grammar, and history philology. Study of the nature and structure of language. Linguists use a synchronic (describing a language as it exists at a given time) or a diachronic (tracing a language's development through its history) approach to language study. Greek philosophers in the 5th century BC who debated the origins of human language were the first in the West to be concerned with linguistic theory. The first complete Greek grammar, written by Dionysus Thrax in the 1st century BC, was a model for Roman grammarians, whose work led to the medieval and Renaissance vernacular grammars. With the rise of historical linguistics in the 19th century, linguistics became a science. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries Ferdinand de Saussure established the structuralist school of linguistics (see structuralism), which analyzed actual speech to learn about the underlying structure of language. In the 1950s Noam Chomsky challenged the structuralist approach, arguing that linguistics should study native speakers' unconscious knowledge of their own language (competence), not their actual production of language (performance), and developed generative grammar
the humanistic study of language and literature
The study of the structure and development of a particular language and its relationship to other languages
the scientific study of language
Relating to languages or the study of human speech and speech sounds
The science of languages, or of the origin, signification, and application of words; glossology
The science of language
the study of language structure and change
Field of knowledge relating to the study of language; involves study of the subsystems of phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics
the humanistic study of language and literature the scientific study of language
(isim) dilbilim