Thursday, March 5, 2009

As I said in class, these things will be on the test:

all the tests are cumulative. they always will be. you don't need to ask.

everything from QuiXams 1 & 2 will also be covered on the midterm.

you need to know the three part articulatory descriptions for the consonants and the vowels, as stated in the chaplets and in class. you need to be able to write out the consonant and vowel charts from memory on the scrap paper that will be provided. knowing the chart will ensure that you can answer the questions about the articulatory descriptions. additionally you need to know the three diphthongs we covered in class as well as the schwar and the caret+r, which are also on the 'legendary' IPA chart i made for you with key words showing how to pronounce all of the symbols in the beginning, middle and end of a word.

additionally you are supposed to know what a natural class is now and if i give you a string of IPA symbols representing phones you are supposed to be able to say what natural class they all belong to and/or which one doesn't belong and why. sesame street all over again.

you need to know the difference between a phone and a phoneme, and the corresponding types of transcription (broad for phonemic and narrow for phonetic). you should remember the four allophones of /t/ that i presented in class and in the chaplet and be able to recognize them in some broad transcriptions. you should also know about the pen/pin vowel phonology rule for mid/southwest dialects int he U.S. as discussed in the chaplet and in class. those two examples are good examples of phonology processes you already know and love and use unconsciously. so you should be able to explain what a phonology problem is based on those examples even though i am not going to give you a phonology problem in English or any other language on the midterm.

you need to know what a minimal pair is and what it proves. the chaplet is self explanatory on this point and we also covered it in class.

IPA: you don't have to be able to write in the IPA although i'll probably give you a point or two of extra credit if you transcribe your name really well in IPA (potentially two points for first and last name highly accurate). you do have to be able to read simple words and sentences in a broad transcription(with no more detail than i have presented in class).

everything you had to memorize (or should have memorized) for QuiXams 1 & 2 you wil still need to know, (which should be obvious but for some reason still eludes a few students).

if you have studied the chaplets and memorized the information you should have no trouble with the test tomorrow. i told you linguistics was not easy and that it requires actual preparation before class, every class, and that if you don't do that preparation it doesn't matter what i do in class because you won't have the materials in your head to work with. the fact that almost no one answers me when i ask you basic questions in class about the material we covered the class before suggest to me that you are not taking that warning seriously. hopefully you are figuring this out and getting back on track.

study to show yourself approved, hard workers who don't need to be ashamed...

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

study with Rachel (of the 11:30 class)

6:00 tonight at Hastings and then again wed or thur depending on demand

btw her mother chose her e-mail address without consulting her, so no judgey-judgey, ok?

one student's questions about the midterm etc

--How much material will the test cover? (As in, how far: We haven't gotten to the new chaplet you sent out this weekend; will we be responsible for any of this material?)

actually we have gotten to some of that material. i've been explaining the difference between phonemes and phones so we can talk about phonology problems, and we've covered natural classes to this end, as well. i've also tried to talk about some of the phonological processes you know intuitively, such as the 'eh' to 'ih' pen to pin process in mid and southwest U.S. dialects. [-NORTH, -EAST] as well as the 4 allophones of /t/ that i presented in class last week.

--Will you post the answers to the translation exercises on p. 50 (IPA --> Engl), p. 52&53 (Enlg --> IPA), and p. 54 (multiple choice q's)?

yes ma'm. i just mailed them to the class.

--When I've been writing words in the IPA, I've noticed that I may pronounce words differently than the 'standard' way. What happens if our own idiosyncratic pronunciation of a word causes us to write it wrong in the IPA?

didn't i write about this in the chaplet? yeah, check the 10 commandments, p. 64, commandment 8

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Study Group Facilitators

Rachel Tolentino- college_girl8509@tamu.edu

email Rachel if you want to study with her group (being assembled) and you can work out a time

also email me if you want to be a facilitator and have your email put up here for others to contact you

Friday, February 13, 2009

QuiXam 2 Next Friday, 2/20

You will need to know

1) everything we studied for QuiXam 1.
2) human biological adaptations for speech/language
3) vocal tract anatomy
4) everything about orthography including
problems with phonics, orthographies, deep and shallow orthographies
5) places and manner of articulation for English consonants

MEMORIZE the CONSONANT CHART!!
I will give you scrap paper, so the first thing you'll do when you start the test is write it out from memory. This will enable you to answer all sorts of questions about consonants and their feature bundles-voicedness, place of articulation, and manner of articulation

Thursday, February 5, 2009

A small extra credit op

for me to know who i'm e-mailing in the moment and learn your names faster- i'll add one point to your quiXam if you start including your digital pic with your email (as an attachment). i'll do it again for the next exam if you continue the practice.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Friday's Exam

There's a nice list of study questions on p. 26 in the second installment of chaplets, Adaptations & Orthography.

Here is a pithier set:

Know the difference between prescriptive and descriptive and that your grandmother has perfect grammar.
What passed for linguistics before modern linguistics? What/who was privileged? What was the goal of that approach to language study? What was ironic about New Testament Greek?
Saussure, descriptive/prescriptive, semiotics, synchronic/diachronic, syntagmatic/paradigmatic, langue and parole
Genie-critical window of first language acquisition
Science and Ideology
Chomsky: the LAD, the UG, competence vs performance, relationship between human language and other primates we know of
form and function, formal linguistics vs functional linguistics
animal communication systems,what they can't do that humans can
design features-we actually went over most of these in class when we talked about animal communication systems, so we'll go ahead and cover them

I'm going to add to this so check back in.