Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/125925
Title: The Domain of Language
Authors: Michael Fortescue
Issue Date: 2004
Publisher: Museum Tusculanum Press
Abstract: This book is intended as counter-evidence to the perception that Linguistics is a domain of dusty schoolroom grammar. It follows that linguistics can be characterised differently than as proponents of theoretical orientations who spend their brief breaks from their bone-dry work bashing each other over the head with their various favourite abstractions. The discipline may appear to outsiders as fragmented and - worse still - lacking in relevance to the real world outside its gates. This book demonstrates that Linguistics, in all its varied branches, can be entertaining as well as thought-provoking, and that its domain is indeed a coherent one despite all the internecine squabbling. In an unconventional way, Michael Fortescue introduces his subject as a kind of fable with a historical moral that professional linguists, as well as students, should enjoy as a useful commentary on the state of the discipline today. is a professor of Linguistics at the University of Copenhagen. He is the author of (London, 1998), and (Amsterdam/Philadelphia, 2001).
link: http://www.oapen.org/record/342370
Keywords: Language;Language and Linguistics;Generative linguistics;Grammar;Metaphors;Passive voice;Semantics;Semiotics;Syntax;Cases, use of;Comparative linguistics;Functional Grammar;Morphology;Morphophonology;Phonetics;Phonology;Pragmatics;English
ISBN: 9788763502139;9788772897066
Theme:教科書-人文類

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