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Crash Course in Linguistics?

  Tags: Linguistics
 Language Learning Forum : General discussion Post Reply
11 messages over 2 pages: 1 2  Next >>
Ashiro
Groupie
United Kingdom
learnxlanguage.com/
Joined 5804 days ago

89 posts - 101 votes 
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 1 of 11
20 June 2009 at 1:46am | IP Logged 
I would imagine there's lots of us who like reading about languages as well as learning them specifically. However, I'm hitting constant roadblocks due to my lack of linguistics training. This is mainly when reading Wikipedia entries and I wondered if there was a crash course that could fill me in enough to understand the average Wikipedia article without spending 6 months reading related articles?

Questions such as:
* Diacritics, what?
* Orthography?
* "laminal postalveolars" - I beg your pardon?
* "phonetic-morphological" - hmmmm....

Anyone a good resource for getting a crash course on all the terminology or maybe a better place to learn language concepts but in easier language?
1 person has voted this message useful



delta910
Diglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5877 days ago

267 posts - 313 votes 
Speaks: English*, Spanish
Studies: Dutch, German

 
 Message 2 of 11
20 June 2009 at 2:35am | IP Logged 
I just do a quick google search.
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Bao
Diglot
Senior Member
Germany
tinyurl.com/pe4kqe5
Joined 5768 days ago

2256 posts - 4046 votes 
Speaks: German*, English
Studies: French, Spanish, Japanese, Mandarin

 
 Message 3 of 11
20 June 2009 at 2:35am | IP Logged 
*diacritics = the additional marks on letters that exist to give them a different phonetic value or convey information about the stress/accent pattern.
Umlauts, accent marks, cedilla, tilde, macron - all those funny little marks you English people miss out on thanks to your crazy orthograpy which is
*correct spelling
*laminal and behind the alveolar ridge (the bumps you can feel with the tip on your tongue on the roof of your mouth just behind your upper front teeth)
*... (only a very vague idea)

Do you know the google search command "define:Word"? Often the results are enough to clarify things.

No linguistics training either, just my love of books and a nervous finger when links are provided. Oh, Firefox with tabs, how I love thee!
(Ever tried to read a paper on the structure of lexical entries without any prior knowledge of the topic? It's fun :D)


Edited by Bao on 20 June 2009 at 2:37am

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anamsc
Triglot
Senior Member
Andorra
Joined 6205 days ago

296 posts - 382 votes 
Speaks: English*, Spanish, Catalan
Studies: Arabic (Levantine), Arabic (Written), French

 
 Message 4 of 11
20 June 2009 at 5:49pm | IP Logged 
When I come across linguistic terms I'm not familiar with, I usually can find a good explanation of them on Wikipedia.
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Ashiro
Groupie
United Kingdom
learnxlanguage.com/
Joined 5804 days ago

89 posts - 101 votes 
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 6 of 11
21 June 2009 at 1:52am | IP Logged 
I know I can do Google searches and click Wikipedia links. I just want to avoid the very common problem of 'wasting' 3 hours researching liguistic terminology.

Wikipedia has a very canny nack of eating time.

Thank you for your suggestions though. They're much appreciated. :)
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Lizzern
Diglot
Senior Member
Norway
Joined 5911 days ago

791 posts - 1053 votes 
Speaks: Norwegian*, English
Studies: Japanese

 
 Message 7 of 11
21 June 2009 at 1:10pm | IP Logged 
Try to find an introductory phonetics/phonology/linguistics textbook aimed at students who take basic courses at uni. I had an excellent one when I took a class in linguistics at uni (linguistic lingo for language students/nerds type thing), the book was in Norwegian though so wouldn't help you. Perhaps you could have a look around Amazon for basics books of this sort, or look at some uni websites to see what books they use, or stop by a university bookstore or a library and ask the people there - you'd be surprised how much they know. It'll help you to no end to actually run through a textbook that introduces these terms in an orderly sort of way, though of course you can just look stuff up in Wikipedia as you go along if you prefer. I'm glad I took the course though, it really helped.

No specific recommendations I'm afraid, but I'm sure there's lots of good stuff easily available so just have a look around and see what you can find.

Liz

Edited by Lizzern on 21 June 2009 at 1:11pm

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