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Linguistics is the scientific study of language. The
word was first used in the middle of the 19th century
to emphasize the difference between a newer approach
to the study of language that was then developing and the
more traditional approach of philology. The differences
were and are largely matters of attitude, emphasis,and
purpose. The philologist is concerned primarily with
the historical development of languages as it is
manifest in written texts and in the context of the
associated literature and culture. The linguist,though
he may be interested in written texts and in the
development of languages through time, tends to give
priority to spoken languages and to the problems of
analyzing them as they operate at a given point in
time.
The field of linguistics may be divided in terms of three dichotomies: synchronic versus diachronic, theoretical versus applied, microlinguistics versus macrolinguistics. A synchronic description of a language describes the language as it is at a given time; a diachronic description is concerned with the historical development of the language and the structural changes that have taken place in it. The goal of theoretical linguistics is the construction of a general theory of the structure of language or of a general theoretical framework for the description of languages; the aim of applied linguistics is the application of the findings and techniques of the scientific study of language to practical tasks, especially to the elaboration of improved methods of language teaching. The terms microlinguistics and macrolinguistics are not yet well established, and they are, in fact, used here purely for convenience. The former refers to a narrower and the latter to a much broader view of the scope of linguistics. According to the microlinguistic view, languages should be analyzed for their own sake and without reference to their social function, to the manner in which they are acquired by children, to the psychological mechanisms that underlie the production and reception of speech, to the literary and the aesthetic or communicative function of language, and so on. In contrast, macrolinguistics embraces all of these aspects of language. Various areas within macrolinguistics have been given terminological recognition: psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, anthropological linguistics, dialectology, mathematical and computational linguistics, and stylistics. A large portion of this article is devoted to theoretical, synchronic microlinguistics, which is generally acknowledged as the central part of the subject; it will be abbreviated henceforth as theoretical linguistics. (J.Lyo.) Encyclopedia Brittanica |
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