Figures
Terminology
Figures or terminology? who knows?
Terminology 2
Figures 2
100

Said language is a structured system of signs governed by internal rules. 

Saussurre 

100

The linguistic ties (e.g., pronouns, conjunctions, lexical relations) that link different parts of a text together, creating a sense of connection.

Cohesion

100

A Neo-Grammarian linguist known for Verner's Law, which explained apparent exceptions to earlier sound change rules in Indo-European languages.

Karl Verner

100

 In SFL, the language variation associated with a specific context of situation, defined by Field, Tenor, and Mode.

Register

100

Cognitive linguistic. LAD, competence vs performance, Universal Grammar, Mental Grammar

Noam Chomsky 

200

Modern Linguistics began with this figure after his discover in 1786 that Sanskrit had affinities with Classical, Germanic, and Celtic languages

Sir William Jones 

200

(Chomsky) A speaker's internalized, unconscious knowledge of the rules of their language system.

Competence

200

In SFL, the organization of language into distinct but related layers or strata: Semantics (meanings), Lexicogrammar (wordings), and Phonology/Graphology (sounds/writing).

Stratification

200

 (Saussure) The sound image or form of a linguistic sign.

Signifier

200

Develops the Stammbaumtheorie (Family Tree Theory), proposing that languages evolve like biological trees from an original language (Ursprache). He is influenced by Darwin's theory of evolution and even writes a fable in reconstructed Proto-Indo-European.

August Schleicher

300

American descriptivism. Focused on scientific, behaviorist approach to language.

Bloomfield 

300

 Linguistic expressions whose meaning is dependent on the context of utterance, particularly the speaker, time, and place (e.g., "I," "here," "now"). Types include person, spatial, temporal, discourse, and social.

Deixis

300

Developed ethnography of communication- language is shaped by social and cultural context.
SPEAKING MODEL

Dell Hymes

300

 An approach to linguistics (and other fields) that viewslanguage as a system of interrelated elements where the value or meaningof each element is defined by its relationship and difference from otherelements in the system.

Structuralism

300

coined "context of situation": meaning depends on social and situational factors. 

Famous quote: "you shall know a word by a company it keeps"--- collocation analysis

Founded the London School of Linguistics

JR Firth

400

Rejected the idea that all speech is about information.
Introduced phatic communion: language used to build social contact  
Very important for pragmatics and sociolinguistics.

Bronislaw Malinowski

400

Playful or humorous rudeness, such as banter orteasing among close friends, which can strengthen social bonds rather than threaten face.

Mock Impoliteness

400

 In Case Grammar, the number of semantic roles (participants) that a verb requires.

Valency

400

The linear relationships between linguistic units that occur in sequence in a structure (e.g., subject followed by verb followed by object). Also called Combinatory.

Syntagmatic Relations:

400

Showed social class affects pronunciation. 

Studied AAVE as ruled-based, legitimate variety.
Proved that variation is systematic, not random--- and socially meaningful

William Labov

500

Generative Grammar was actually introduced by this figure and NOT Chomsky. Simply DEVELOPED  by Chomsky

Zellig Harris 

500

 Language used primarily to establish and maintain social contact and solidarity, rather than to convey information (e.g., small talk about the weather).

Phatic Communion

500

Linguists known for their textbook Discourse Analysis, which highlights the cognitive and pragmatic processes involved in understanding language beyond the sentence level, emphasizing the role of context, inference, and mental models

Gillian Brown & George Yule

500

(Schleicher) The hypothetical original language from which a family of languages is believed to have descended.

Ursprache

500

A 19th-century linguist and philosopher who viewed language as an activity (energeia) rather than just a product. He introduced the concept of innere Sprachform (inner form of language) and contributed to language typology based on morphological structure.

Wilhelm von Humboldt

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