幫助中心 | 我的帳號 | 關於我們

普通語言學概論/當代國外語言學與應用語言學文庫

  • 作者:(英)羅賓斯
  • 出版社:外語教研
  • ISBN:9787560019338
  • 出版日期:2000/08/01
  • 裝幀:平裝
  • 頁數:450
人民幣:RMB 55.9 元      售價:
放入購物車
加入收藏夾

內容大鋼

作者介紹
(英)羅賓斯

目錄
Preface by Halliday
王宗炎序
導讀
Preface to first edition
Preface to second edition
Preface to third edition
Preface to fourtb edition
System of reference
Transcriptions and abbreviations
  General linguistics: the scope of the subject
  1.1 General linguistics as the study of language
    1.1.1  Languages and languages
    1.1.2  Descriptive, historical, and comparative linguistics
    1.1.3 The term 'philology'
  1.2 Linguistics as a science
    1.2.1  Implications of the term 'science'
    1.2.2  Practical applications
  1.3 The range of general linguistics
    1.3.1  Levels of analysis
    1.3.2  Language and communication
    1.3.3  Phonetics, phonology, grammar, semantics
  1.4 Semantics
    1.4.1  Philosophical and linguistic interest in meaning
    1.4.2 Word meaning
    1.4.3  Sentence meaning
    1.4.4 Extralinguistic context
    1.4.5  Translation
  General bibliography
  Bibliography for Chapter Ⅰ
  Notes to Chapter Ⅰ
2 Theoretical and methodological considerations
  2.1 Abstractions
    2.1.1  The status of linguistic abstractions
    2.1.2  Structural linguistics: syntagmatic and
    paradigmatic relations
  2.2 Dialect, idiolect, style
    2.2.1  Dialects as subdivisions of languages
    2.2.2  Dialect mapping: isoglosses
    2.2.3  Class dialects and 'standard languages'
    2.2.4  Criteria for determining dialect status
    2.2.5  Linguistic tendencies affecting dialectal divisions
  2.3 General and particular
  2.4 The structural treatment of lexical meaning
    2.4.1  Lexical interrelations
    2.4.2  Collocation
    2.4.3  Semantic field theory
  Bibliography for Chapter 2
  Notes to Chapter 2
3 Phonetics
  3.1 Articulatory phonetics

    3.1.1 The spoken foundation of language
    3.1.2 Primacy of articulatory phonetics
    3.1.3 The physiological basis of speaking
  3.2 The organs of speech
    3.2.1 The glottis
    3.2.2 The supraglottal organs of speech
    3.2.3 Nasalization
  3.3 Segmentation: vowel and consonant
    3.3.1 Segmentation
    3.3.2 Vowels and consonants: transcription
    3.3.3 Vowels
    3.3.4 Consonants
  3.4 Acoustic phonetics
  3.5 Piurisegmental features
    3.5.1 The continuum of articulation
    3.5.2 Glottal and supraglottal features
    3.5.3 Stress
    3.5.4 Pitch
    3.5.5 Voice quality
  3.6 Phonetics in linguistics
  Bibliography for Chapter 3
  Notes to Chapter 3
4 Phonology
  4.1 Speech and writing
  4.2 Narrow and broad transcription: phonetics and
    phonology
  4.3 The phoneme theory
    4.3.1 The phonemic principle, phonemics
    4.3.2 Segmental phonemes
    4.3.3 Phonemic analysis of length and stress
    4.3.4 The syllable
    4.3.5 Tone phonemes
    4.3.6 Intonation
    4.3.7 Distinctive features
  4.4 Further developments
    4.4.1 Classical phoneme theory
    4.4.2 Juncture phonemes
    4.4.3 Prosodic phonology
    4.4.4 Generative phonology
    4.4.5 Natural generative phonology
    4.4.6 Rule ordering
    4.4.7 Autosegmental and metrical phonology
  Bibliography for Chapter 4
  Notes to Chapter 4
5 Grammar: grammatical elements
  5.1 Preliminary questions
    5.1.1 Uses of the term 'grammar'
    5.1.2 Formal grammar
    5.1.3 The basic units of grammar
  5.2 The sentence

  5.3 The word
    5.3.1 Grammatical criteria of word status
    5.3.2 Phonological markers of the word
  unit
    5-3.3 Variant word forms
  5.4 The morpheme
    5.4.1 The morpheme as the minimal grammatical unit
    5.4.2 Morpheme variants (allomorphs)
    5.4.3 Bound and free morphemes: root and affix
  5.5 The semantic status of morphemes
    Bibliography for Chapters 5 and 6
    Notes to Chapter 5
6 Grammar: grammatical classes, structures, and categories
  6.1 Syntactic relations
  6.2 Word classes
  6.3 Immediate constituents
    6.3.1 General principles: basic syntactic structures
    6.3.2 Endocentric and exocentric: subordinate and coordinate
    6.3.3 Word order and syntactic structure
    6.3.4 Cross-cutting of immediate constituents and word boundaries
    6.3.5 Comparison with traditional practice
  6.4 Grammatical categories
    6.4.1 Number, gender, case
    6.4.2 Concord and government
    6.4.3 Subject and object
    6.4.4 Morphology in relation to syntax
    6.4.5 Inflection and derivation
    6.4.6 Grammatical functions of stress and pitch features
    6.4.7 Morpheme and category
  6.5 Subclasses, irregularities, and economy
  6.6 Grammatical semantics
    6.6.1 Semantic correlations
    6.6.2 Meanings of grammatical categories
    6.6.3 Class meanings and structural meanings
    6.6.4 Methodological implications
  Notes to Chapter 6
7 Current linguistic theory
  7. 1 Theory formation
    7. 1.1 Linguistic theory and linguistic practice
    7. 1 .2 Rival theories
  7.2 Transformational-generative linguistics (TG)
    7.2.1 General considerations
    7.2.2 Early formulation: Syntactic structures
    7.2.3 Later developments: Aspects of the theory of syntax and after
  7.2.4 Government and binding
    7.3 Other current theories
  7.3.1 General context
  7.3.2 Generalized phrase structure grammar(GPSG)
  7.3.3 Relational and functional grammar
  7.3.4 Dependency grammars

    7.4 Earlier post-'structuralist' theories
  7.4.1 General context
  7.4.2 Tagmemics
  7.4.3 M.A.K. Halliday: systemic grammar
  7.4.4 Stratificational linguistics
  7.5 Postscript
  Bibliography for Chapter 7
  Notes to Chapter 7
8 Linguistic comparison
  8.3 Historically orientated comparison of languages (comparative and historical linguistics)
    8.1.1 The material
    8.1.2 The Great Vowel Shift in English
    8.1.3 Semantic changes
    8.1.4 The Indo-European family
    8.1.5 Other language families
    8.1.6 The representation of correspondences
    8.1.7 The neogrammarian thesis
    8.1.8 Loan words
    8.1.9 Analogy
    8.1.10 Sound change and generative grammar
    8.1. 11 Historical inferences
  8.2 Typological comparison
    8.2.1 General principles
    8.2.2 Phonetic typology
    8.2.3 Phonological typology
    8.2.4 Grammatical typology
    8.2.5 Linguistic typology and linguistic universals
    8.2.6 Structural typology
    8.2.7 Lexical typology
    8.2.8 Historical change and linguistic typology
    8.2.9 Summary
    Bibliography for Chapter 8
    Notes to Chapter 8
9 Wider perspectives
  9.1 Linguistics, anthropology and sociology
    9.1.1 Linguistics and anthropology
    9.1.2 Linguistics and sociology: sociolinguistics
  9.2 Linguistics and philosophy
  9.3 Linguistics and psychology
  9.4 Linguistics and language teaching: linguistics and communications engineering
    9.4.1 Linguistics and language teaching
    9.4.2 Linguistics and communications engineering
  9.5 Linguistics and literature
  9.6 Outline of the history of linguistic studies in Western Europe
Bibliography for Chapter 9
Notes to Chapter 9
Index

  • 商品搜索:
  • | 高級搜索
首頁新手上路客服中心關於我們聯絡我們Top↑
Copyrightc 1999~2008 美商天龍國際圖書股份有限公司 臺灣分公司. All rights reserved.
營業地址:臺北市中正區重慶南路一段103號1F 105號1F-2F
讀者服務部電話:02-2381-2033 02-2381-1863 時間:週一-週五 10:00-17:00
 服務信箱:bookuu@69book.com 客戶、意見信箱:cs@69book.com
ICP證:浙B2-20060032