26.06.2015 Views

url?sa=t&source=web&cd=4&ved=0CCAQFjAD&url=http://data.ulis.vnu.edu.vn/jspui/bitstream/123456789/1966/1/54_1405152974

url?sa=t&source=web&cd=4&ved=0CCAQFjAD&url=http://data.ulis.vnu.edu.vn/jspui/bitstream/123456789/1966/1/54_1405152974

url?sa=t&source=web&cd=4&ved=0CCAQFjAD&url=http://data.ulis.vnu.edu.vn/jspui/bitstream/123456789/1966/1/54_1405152974

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

argument 33<br />

(2) See chart parser.<br />

archaism (n.) A term used in relation to any domain of language structure for<br />

an old word or phrase no longer in general spoken or written use. Archaisms are<br />

found for example in poetry, nursery rhymes, historical novels, biblical translations<br />

and place names. Archaic vocabulary in English includes damsel, hither,<br />

oft, and yon. Archaic grammar includes the verb endings -est and -eth (as in<br />

goest and goeth), and such forms as ’tis and spake. Archaic spellings can be seen<br />

in Ye olde tea shoppe. See also obsolescence (1).<br />

archiphoneme (n.) A term used in phonology referring to a way of handling<br />

the problem of neutralization (i.e. when the contrast between phonemes is<br />

lost in certain positions in a word). In such cases as plosives following initial<br />

/s-/, where there is no opposition (e.g. there is no *sgin to contrast with skin),<br />

the problem for the phonologist is how to analyse the second element of these<br />

words. To choose either the voiceless transcription /sk}n/ or the voiced one<br />

/sg}n/ would be to attribute to the element a contrastive status it does not<br />

possess. The solution suggested by the Prague School phonologist Nikolai<br />

Trubetskoy (1890–1939) was to set up a new category for such cases, which he<br />

called an archiphoneme, and to transcribe it with a different symbol. A capital<br />

letter is sometimes used, e.g. /sK}n/. Alternative ways of analysing the problem<br />

have been suggested, as in morphophonemic approaches.<br />

archistratum (n.) A term sometimes used in sociolinguistics, referring to a<br />

privileged variety of language from which a community draws its cultured or<br />

intellectual vocabulary. For example, Classical Arabic is used as an archistratum<br />

throughout the Islamic world.<br />

area (n.) A term used in dialectology for any geographical region isolated on<br />

the basis of its linguistic characteristics. The study of the linguistic properties of<br />

‘areas’ – the analysis of the divergent forms they contain, and their historical<br />

antecedents – is known as areal linguistics. An areal classification would establish<br />

areal types (or groups), such as the Scandinavian languages, or the Londoninfluenced<br />

dialects – cases where it is possible to show certain linguistic features in<br />

common as a result of the proximity of the speech communities. Such a classification<br />

often cuts across that made on purely historical grounds. It is often possible<br />

to identify a focal area – the region from which these linguistic characteristics<br />

have spread to the area as a whole (as in the case of London) – and several other<br />

significant parts of an area have been terminologically distinguished, e.g. the<br />

transitional areas which occur between adjacent areas, the relic areas which<br />

preserve linguistic features of an earlier stage of development. Areal linguistics is<br />

contrasted with non-areal differences in language use, e.g. contrasts between<br />

male and female speech, and between some social varieties. The German term<br />

Sprachbund (‘language league’) is also widely used in the sense of a ‘linguistic area’.<br />

areal linguistics<br />

see area<br />

argument (n.) (A, arg) A term used in predicate calculus, and often found in<br />

the discussion of semantic theory, to refer to the relationship of a name or

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!