
Linguistics
What
is linguistics?
What do linguists do?
Linguistics is a science at the crossroads of humanities,
social and natural sciences. It is a discipline for those who like to
have their hands in many fields at the same time – it satisfies
the curiosity of anthropologists, historians, scholars of classical languages,
biologists, psychologists and others.
Interested? Read the linguistics course descriptions. These YouTube videos illustrate why linguistics can be so fascinating!
Linguists do not necessarily teach or know many foreign
languages, although it helps, but they ask questions about how LANGUAGE
works such as: What does LANGUAGE usage indicate about speakers? How
is LANGUAGE related to our mind? How did LANGUAGE originate? Why
does LANGUAGE change and what triggers the change? How do speakers
use LANGUAGE to advance their position in society? Why do LANGUAGES
enter into political conflicts and peace negotiations? And so on. Their
focus is on LANGUAGE as inseparable from us, speakers, defining and molding
us as we use and change it to suit our needs.
Linguists approach LANGUAGE as a system of hierarchically arranged structures
that pattern with meanings. At the same time, linguists readily
admit that LANGUAGE is an unknown phenomenon, always in a state of flux,
renewing itself from within as well as the outside.
Linguists are ecologists who describe dying LANGUAGES and strive to preserve
them. They carry around notebooks to record advertisements, accents, grammatical "mistakes"... and
force their students to do the same.
Linguists are interested in the slang of high school students as well
as in reconstructing the language of the Indo-European homeland, in literary
standards as well as everyday vernaculars.
|