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Introduction to Linguistic Theory
Linguistics 201
Spring 2003, Lecture Section 2
TuTh 1.00-2.15, Dickinson 214
Instructor: Meredith Landman
Email: landman@linguist.umass.edu
Office: 501 South College
Office hours: Fri 2.00-3.00
Course description. This course is an introduction to linguistics, the scientific study of human language. We will focus on some basic questions
about language: What do we actually know when we know a language? How
is the structure of language best described? Are there properties which
all languages share, and what do those properties tell us about language
itself?
For most of the semester we will concentrate on the
main areas of linguistic knowledge: sounds and their patterns (phonetics,
phonology),
words (morphology), sentences (syntax), and meaning (semantics). We will
also spend some time talking about how children acquire language (language
acquisition) and how languages vary and change.
Course requirements and grading.
- Homework (50%). Homework assignments will teach you how to do linguistics
more than anything else. Assignments will typically be assigned on
a
Thursday and due at the beginning of class the following Thursday.
Assignments should be typed, unless they require special characters
(e.g., phonetics
fonts, syntactic trees, etc.). You may work together, as long as you:
(i) write the name of the person who you worked with at the top of
the
page below yours; (ii) write up the assignment you turn in on your
own.
- Exams (25%). The first exam (on Phonetics and Phonology) will be
given approximately halfway through the course; the second (on Morphology
and Syntax) on the last day of class. You will be given plenty of time
to prepare for the exams. There will be no make-up exams.
- Quizzes (10%). There will be one phonetics quiz within the first
three weeks of the course. You will be given a week in advance to prepare
for it.
- Attendance and Participation (15%). To do well in this course it
is essential that you attend all classes. Lectures will frequently
cover
material
not
available
in
the textbook. If you become sick or other trouble prevents you from
attending class, you must let me know ahead of time.
Academic Honesty. Be aware of university regulations on academic
honesty. Ask me when in doubt. The following are considered to be
cheating:
- copying or sharing all or part of a homework assignment;
- copying answers from books;
- copying or sharing information during an exam.
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