Read The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language Online
Authors: Steven Pinker
Universal Grammar.
The basic design underlying the grammars of all human languages; also refers to the circuitry in children’s brains that allows them to learn the grammar of their parents’ language.verb.
One of the major syntactic categories, comprising words that typically refer to an action or state:
hit, break, run, know, seem
.voice.
The difference between the active and passive constructions:
Dog bites man
versus
Man is bitten by dog
.voicing.
Vibration of the vocal folds in the larynx simultaneous with the articulation of a consonant; the difference between
b, d, g, z, v
(voiced) and
p, t, k, s, f
(unvoiced).vowel.
A phoneme pronounced without any constriction of the airway.white matter.
See
cortex.word.
See
listeme, morphology, syntactic atom.X-bar.
The smallest kind of phrase, consisting of a head and its non-subject arguments (role-players):
The Romans’
DESTRUCTION OF THE CITY
; She
WENT TO SCHOOL
on foot; He is very
PROUD OF HIS SON
.X-bar theory; X-bar phrase structure.
The particular kind of phrase structure rules thought to be used in human languages, according to which all the phrases in all languages conform to a single plan. In that plan, the properties of the whole phrase are determined by the properties of a single element, the head, inside the phrase.
Note: The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
Page numbers prefaced with “PS” are from the “P.S.” section at the end of the book.
Académie Française, 385
Accents, 186–170, 176, 295–296, PS11, PS16, PS23
Afrikaans, 253
Afro-Asiatic, 256, 259, 261, 262
Agreement, 14, 32–34, 120–121, 389, 391–392, 404–405,
glossaryAllen, W., 74, 119, 195, 304, 397
Alpert, N., 315
Alphabet, 186, 188, 235, 253, PS14, PS22–23
Altaic languages, 234, 256, 259
Ambiguity, 69–70, 94, 101, 107, 112, 127, 206–218, 228, 288–289
American English, 248–250, 295, 388
American languages, 16, 48, 50–55, 120, 186, 234, 241, 245, 257–260, 262, 267, PS10–11, PS15, PS16
American Sign Language (ASL), 24, 26–28, 120, 147–148, 344, 346–347, 359, PS17
Anderson, J., 455
Anderson, R., 144
Animal cognition, 5, 45, 59–61, 243, 298, 311, 329, 347
Animal communication, 154, 329, 343, 363, PS20
Anomia, 318–321
Anthropology, 12–15, 48–55, 361–365, 379–381, 421, 427–432, 436
Apache, 50, 120
Aphasia, 3, 34–37, 57, 111, 304–308, 313–325, 342,
glossaryArabic, 165, 256, 259, 261
Arguments, 99–102, 105–108, 114–115
Aronoff, M., 454, 458, 460
Artificial intelligence, 190–195, 199,
glossary. See also
Computers and languageASL,
glossary. See also
American Sign LanguageAspect, 26, 128
Atran, S., 440
Au, T., 57
Auditory perception.
See
HearingAustralian languages, 232, 241, 257, 258, 259, 262–274, 292
Autosegmental phonology, 174–176
Auxiliaries, 18, 28–31, 110–111, 276,
glossary
Babbling, 269
Baillargeon, R., 455
Baker, M., PS 15
Bantu, 14, 120–121, 167, 234, 256, PS16
Bar Hillel, Y., 454
Barry, D., 195, 248
Barzun, J., 408–409
Basque, 233, 234, 256, 261
Bates, E., 351, 377, 450, 461, 463, 465
Baynes, K., 318
Beatles, 183
Behavioral genetics, 333–339, PS11.
See also
Genes; Genes and language.Behavorism, 8–9, 346, 421–423,
glossaryBellugi, U., 41, 307
Belushi, J., 168
Belviso, B., 168
Benedict, R., 48
Berlin, B., 440, 451
Bernstein, T., 394, 402
Berra, Y., 338
Berwick, R., 461
Bever, T., 346, 457, 458
Bickerton, D., 21, 377, 460, 465
Bilingualism, 295–296, PS9, PS16–17
Birdsong, D., 455, 461, PS17
Black English Vernacular, 16–19, 29, 290, PS11, PS22, PS23
Bloom, A., 56–57
Bloom, P., 376, 456, 459, 464, PS5, PS14.
Boas, F., 48, 54
Bodmer, W., 447–448
Bolinger, D., 398, 413, 456
Bombeck, E., 302–303, 383
Bergman, D., 399
Bouchard, T., 335–336
Bowerman, M., 279
Bracken, H., PS3.
Brain, 34–35, 47, 67, 293–294, 304–324, 360, 373–376, 438, PS16, PS18–19
Brain damage.
See
AphasiaBraine, M., 285, 460
Brandreth, G., 399, 454
Breathing, 159–160, 268–269
Bregman, A., 153, PS3
Breland, K. and M., 347
Bresnan, J., 14, 454, 457, 464, PS4, PS13.
Broca, P., 304
Broca’s area, 304, 313–317, 319–321, 343, 360, 362, 363, PS18
Brown, D., 427–432
Brown, R., 10, 50–51, 152, 272–275, 284, 450, 455, 469, PS4, PS23
Bryson, B., 466, PS23
Bush, G. H. W., 337, 403–404
Bushman.
See
Khoisan
Calvin, W., 375
Campbell, J., 453
Canadian English, 171
Caplan, D., 315, 461, 462, 463
Caramazza, A., 463
Carey, S., 145, 455, 468
Carroll, L., 31–32, 80–81, 109, 112, 205
Case, 108–110, 232–233, 240, 252, 402–406,
glossaryCaucasian languages, 257
Cavalli-Sforza, L., 256, 258, 260, 447–448, PS16
Celtic, 233, 251, 254
Chaucer, G., 252, 277, 389
Cheney, D., 59, 362
Cherokee, 15, 186
Children, 20, 23, 27–34, 58–59, 140–141, 144–145, 146–147, 265–388, 293–299, 248–350, 431, PS4, PS11, PS16–17
Chimpanzees, 343–359, 361, PS20
Chinese Sign Language, 147
Chomsky, C., 456
Chomsky, N., 8–11, 26, 29–31, 41, 75, 79, 85–89, 95–96, 104, 111, 113–114, 119, 218, 232, 238–239, 304, 341, 365–366, 368, 369, 373–374, 413, 425, 429, 436, 452, 453, PS3, PS4, PS8, PS10, PS11, PS13, PS14, PS20
Churchill, W., 387
Clahsen, H., 454
Clark, E., 455, 458, 460
Clark, H., 458
Clicks, 167–168, PS16
Clinton, B., 404–405, PS14
Closed-class words.
See
Function wordsCognitive science, 3,
glossaryCole, R., 455
Coleridge, S. T., 61
Competence and performance, 195–196, 201–205, 210–212
Compounds, 122, 126, 136–138, 140–141, 399, 406–407,
glossaryComprehension, 194–230, 272, 314, 318, PS14–15
Computers and language, 15, 19, 32, 69–72, 84–90, 122, 123, 157, 165, 178–180, 184–185, 190–195, 199–200, 207–209, 215, 227, 237, 270, PS14, PS14–15, PS20
Comrie, B., 450, 458, 459
Concepts, 45, 48–56, 57–61, 68, 70, 147–152, 429–430, 432–434, 437, 438–443
Conrad, J., 296
Consonants, 165–166, 169–170, 172–176, 178, 247,
glossaryContent words,
glossary. See also
Function wordsCooper, L., 62–63
Cooper, W., 455
Corballis, M., 462,
Cosmides, L., 334, 425, 429, 449, 465, 467, 468
Crain, S., 31–32, 141
Creoles and creolization, 20–28, 57, 73, 359, PS11, PS22
Crick, F., 61
Critical period, 25–26, 295–301, PS16–17
Crystal, D., 455, 456, 459, 466, PS22
Culicover, P., PS13.
Culture, 5–6, 13–15, 19, 421–423, 429–432
Cuneiform, 186
Curtiss, S., 451, 461
Czech, 139, 267
Daly, M., 468
Damasio, A. and H., 463
Darwin, C., 6, 7, 149, 242, 254, 341, 351–352, 365–369, 370, 377, 381, 425, 435, PS10
Dative, 14, 248,
glossaryDawkins, R., 371, 372, 452, 465, PS5
Deacon, T., 360, 465
Deafness, 24, 25, 57–59, 269, 282, 296, 297–298, 307–308, 346–347, PS17
Dean, D., 134
Deep structure, 113–118, 218–222, 453,
glossaryDeixis, 71
Dennett, D., 452, 465, PS5.
Derivation, 121–123, 125–130, 393–394, 407–410,
glossaryDi Sciullo, A., 142–143, 453
Diachronic linguistics.
See
Historical changeDialects, 15, 16–19
Dictionaries, 119, 123, 143–145, 205, 396, 397, 416–417
Dictionary, mental, 74–75, 91, 105–108, 114–116, 125, 130–152, 197–199, 317–321
Didion, J., 61
Discourse,
glossary. See also
PragmaticsDronkers, N., 462
Druyan, A., 344
Dutch, 253
Dylan, B., 83, 409–410
Dyslexia, 186, 312, 329,
glossaryDyson, F., 241–242
Ebonics.
See
Black English VernacularEducation, PS17
EEG, 219, 306, 319, 324
Eimas, P., 266
Einstein, A., 61–62
ELIZA, 193–194
Embedding, 86–87, 91–93, 201–206, 291–292
Emonds, J., 405, 413
English, history of, 32, 109, 130, 131, 163–164, 187, 241, 247–253, 278–279, 386–389, 392, 417–418
English-only movement, PS23
Ervin-Tripp, S., 460–461
Espy, W., 399, 452, 454, 456
Etcoff, N., 462
Evoked potentials.
See
EEGEverett, D., PS10, P11, PS15
Evolution, 241–245, 298–301, 308–313, 351–359, 365–373, 425, PS19–20
Evolution of humans, 5, 260–262, 268, 352–365, 425, 447–448
Evolution of language, 341, 351–366, 373–381, PS5, P10, PS19–21
Evolutionary psychology, 425–427
Extinction of languages, 262–264, PS16
Faraday, M., 61–62
Faulkner, W., 78
Feral children, 281–282, 296–298
Fernald, A., 461
Finite-state devices, 80–90, 91–93, 123–124, 184, 203–204, 209, 213, 419–420, 452
Fitch, T, PS20
fMRI.
See
MRIFodor, J., 419–421, PS4
FOXP2 gene, 38, 331–332, PS12, PS20
Frayn, M., 81–83, 84
Frazier, L., 457
Freeman, D., 428
Freeman, J., PS21
French, 112, 165, 251–252, 254, 267, 385, 289
Function words, 35–36, 110–113
Galaburda, A., 360, 461
Gallistel, C.R., 425
Gamow, G., PS5.
Garden path sentences, 211–216
Gardner, B. and A., 364, 350
Gardner, H., 35–36, 449, 462
Gardner, M., PS5
Garnsey, S., 213
Gazzaniga, M., 305, 312, 313, 425, 461, 463
Geertz, C., 427
Gelman, S., 443, 467
Gender, 14–15, 111, 120–122, 277,
glossaryGeneral Semantics, 46
Genes, 62, 75–76, 259–261, 298–301, 311, 328–330, 333–336, 360–362, 370, 422–424, 426, 444–448, PS12, PS19–20, P22,
glossaryGenes and language, 37–38, 41–43, 302–304, 330–333, 337, 360, PS12, PS17, PS20
Genie, 297
German, 50, 112, 113, 165, 173, 235, 253, 277
Geschwind, N., 461, 462
Gleitman, L., 453, 455, 460
Glossolalia, 168
Glottis, 160, 165
Golinkoff, R., 460, PS16
Goodall, J., 347
Goodglass, H., 462
Goodman, N., 432–433
Gopnik, M., 37–39, 302–303, 332–333
Gordon, P., 140–141, 237, PS11
Gould, S. J., 359, 370, 468, PS5
Grammar, generative, 9, 76–81, 89–118, 124–143, 159, 195–197, 237–241, 383,
glossaryGrammar, prescriptive, 16, 19, 79–80, 383–418, PS21,
glossaryGrammar, Universal.
See
Universal GrammarGrammatical categories, 91–92, 97–99, 127, 138–139, 206–207, 289.
See also
Nouns, VerbsGreek, 120, 235, 254, 258
Greenberg, J., 234–237, 256–259
Grice, P., 228–230
Grimm, J., 254
Grimshaw, J., 453
Hackers, 130–131, 133, 163
Hagoort, P., PS 19
Haig, A., 130
Haldane, J., 369
Hale, K., 264
Halle, M., 10, 454, 456, PS14
Harris, J. R., PS11, PS22
Hauser, M., PS20
Hawaiian, 257
Hawaiian Pidgin and Creole, 20–23
Hayakawa, S. I., 46
Hadza, PS16
Hearing, 153–154, 156–158
Heath, S. B., 29
Hebb, D. O., PS3.
Heinlein, R., 134
Hellman, L., 110
Hickok, G., PS5, PS19
Hieroglyphics, 186
Hinton, G., 459
Hirschberg, S. and T., PS23
Hirsh-Pasek, K., 460, PS16
Historical change, 242–248, 257–262, 416–418, PS15–16, PS23.
See also
English, history ofHockett, C., 159, 238
Hofstadter, D., 452
Hopi, 53, 120
Humboldt, W. von, 75
Humor and wordplay, 48, 75, 80, 82, 94, 107–108, 112–113, 130–135, 155–157, 163, 166, 168–169, 170, 171, 175–177, 182, 185, 192, 230, 390, 399–402
Human nature, 419–448, PS10, PS21
Hungarian, 256
Hunter-gatherers, 5, 12, 259, 379–381, 425, 438–440, PS16
Hurfbrd, J., 300, 461
Hutchinson, J., 151
Huttenlocher, P., 461
Illiteracy, 186
Indian, American.
See
American languagesIndian languages, 234, 253–257, 259, 267
Individual differences, 333–339, 444–448
Indo-European, 132, 253–257, 259, 261, 278, PS15–l6,
glossaryInduction, 148–152, 432–436,
glossaryInfant cognition, 59, 151, 266–269, 441–442
Infinity of language, 77–78, 84, 93, 122–124, 127, 292, 424
Inflection, 25, 32–34, 38–39, 46, 120–122, 123–127, 131–141, 232–233, 236, 239–240, 277–279, 288, 320, 333, 388–389, 393–394,
glossaryInnateness of language, 5–7, 9–10, 13–15, 18–20, 31, 104, 141, 186, 243–244, 245, 281, 287, 327, 424–425
Intonation, 160,
glossaryIrish.
See
CelticIrregularity, 134–141, 187, 247, 255–256, 277–279, 288, 388, 393–394, PS4, PS6,
glossaryItalian, 120, 168–169, 170, 234, 254, 320
Jackendoff, R., 425, 452, 453, 456, 468, PS10, PS13, PS14, PS21
James, W., 7, 243
Japanese, 103, 146, 168, 170, 186, 202, 233, 236, 245, 257, 259, 260
Jesperson, O., 459
Jeyifous, S., 468
Johnson, S., 119, 417–418
Joos, M., 232
Jordan, M., 456
Journalism, 223–226, 302–304
Jusczyk, P., 266, 267
Kaplan, S., 468
Kay, P., 451
Keenan, J., 25
Kegl, J., 25
Kenneally, C., PS19
Kennedy, R. F., 101
Khan, Genghis, 256
Khoisan, 135, 256, PS16
Kilpatrick, J., 302–303, 332
Kim, J., 454–466
King, M. L., 339
Kinsbourne, M., 309–311
Kiparsky, P., 140, 454, 459