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  • 語言學教程 第五版 胡壯麟著考研用書 英語語言學教材 普通語言學
    該商品所屬分類:圖書 -> 北京大學出版社
    【市場價】
    905-1312
    【優惠價】
    566-820
    【作者】 胡壯麟 
    【出版社】北京大學出版社 
    【ISBN】9787301281932
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    內容介紹



    出版社:北京大學出版社
    ISBN:9787301281932
    版次:5

    商品編碼:12198448
    品牌:北京大學出版社
    包裝:平裝

    叢書名:21世紀英語專業繫列教材
    開本:16開
    出版時間:2015-05-01

    用紙:膠版紙
    頁數:388
    字數:250000

    代碼:48
    作者:胡壯麟

        
        
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    編輯推薦

    《語言學教程》自1988年首次出版以來,改版五次,印刷九十餘次,發行量達二百五十萬冊。目前已被國內高等院校普遍作為英語專業本科、碩士語言學方向必修教材以及考研必讀教材,並吸引了大量對語言學感興趣的非英語專業讀者。
    《語言學教程》(第五版)在第四版基礎上聽取廣大師生意見修訂而成。包括語言學理論介紹、語音、詞彙、句法、語義、語言與認知、語言與社會文化、語用學、語言與文學、語言與計算機、語言學與外語教學、語言學流派等十二章。此次修訂充分汲取國內外語言學研究新的理論和成果,特別是信息技術的迅猛發展帶給語言學各分支的衝擊性的變革和發展,更為全面而繫統地闡述了理論和應用語言學領域的內容,闡述方式深入遷出、脈絡清晰,利於教師課上教學和學術課下自學。
    本教材另配有中文譯本和練習冊,並為使用該教材的老師提供免費的教學配套課件。

    內容簡介

    《語言學教程》自1988年首次出版以來,改版四次,印刷八十餘次,發行量達二百萬冊。目前已被國內高等院校普遍作為英語專業本科、碩士語言學方向必修教材以及考研必讀教材,並吸引了大量對語言學感興趣的非英語專業讀者。是國內出名的語言學教材,具有較高的社會影響力和教學、科研認可度。此次改版,編輯部事先通過網上信息搜集、訪談等方式,就一線教師和學生對該教材的使用情況進行了調查。後經本書主編、副主編和出版社方面的討論,一致達成如下修改方案:
    1. 難度上不做大的變動。2. 全書的總體框架不變,章節不變。3.根據一線教師的需求,一方面在教程中增加一些生動的,貼近生活的例子來解釋、說明專業術語和理論;另一方面,內容更新,與時俱進,就近些年來語言學研究的新發展和新熱點加以補充和闡釋,如將近些年來很熱點的認知語言學部分進行擴充等。但從頁數考慮,全書增加的內容版面要限制在第四版的10%以內。4.排版時縮小行距,使用英文版式,減少頁數。以便定價讓學生更能接受。

    作者簡介

    胡壯麟,北京大學資深教授、博導,繫統功能語言學的代表學者,清華大學雙聘教授、北京師範大學兼職博導。被42所大學聘為兼職教授或客座教授。完成專著 4部,主編7部,合著、合編14 部,譯著1部、論文206篇。

    目錄

    CONTENTS
    Chapter 1Invitations to Linguistics1.1Why Study Language?1.2What Is Language?1.3Design Features of Language1.3.1Arbitrariness1.3.2Duality1.3.3Creativity1.3.4Displacement1.4Origin of Language1.5Functions of Language1.5.1Informative Function1.5.2Interpersonal Function1.5.3Performative Function1.5.4Emotive Function1.5.5Phatic Communion1.5.6Recreational Function1.5.7Metalingual Function1.6What Is Linguistics?1.7Main Branches of Linguistics1.7.1Phonetics1.7.2Phonology1.7.3Morphology1.7.4Syntax1.7.5Semantics1.7.6Pragmatics1.8Macrolinguistics1.8.1Psycholinguistics1.8.2Sociolinguistics1.8.3Anthropological Linguistics1.8.4Computational Linguistics1.9Important Distinctions in Linguistics1.9.1Descriptive vs. Prescriptive1.9.2Synchronic vs. Diachronic1.9.3Langue & Parole1.9.4Competence & PerformanceChapter 2Speech Sounds2.1Speech Production and Phonetic Transcription2.1.1Speech Production2.1.2Phonetic Transcription—The IPA2.2Consonants and Vowels2.2.1Consonants2.2.2Vowels2.2.3The Sounds of English2.3Phonological Analysis2.3.1Phonemes2.3.2Allophones2.3.3Phonological Rules2.3.4Rule Ordering2.4Suprasegmentals2.4.1Syllable2.4.2Sonority Scale2.4.3Stress2.4.4Intonation and ToneChapter 3Words and Morphology3.1The Nature of Words3.1.1What Is a word?3.1.2Content Words and Function Words3.2Types of Morphemes3.3Morphological Processes3.3.1Derivation3.3.2Compounding3.3.3Inflection3.3.4Minor Morphological ProcessesChapter 4From Word to Text4.1Syntactic Relations4.1.1Positional Relation4.1.2Relation of Substitutability4.1.3Relation of CoOccurrence4.2Grammatical Construction and Its Constituents4.2.1Grammatical Construction4.2.2Immediate Constituents4.2.3Endocentric and Exocentric Constructions4.2.4Coordination and Subordination4.3Syntactic Function4.3.1Subject4.3.2Predicate4.3.3Object4.3.4The Relation between Classes and
    Functions4.4Category4.4.1Number4.4.2Gender4.4.3Case4.4.4Agreement4.5Phrase, Clause and Sentence4.5.1Phrase4.5.2Clause4.5.3Sentence4.6Recursiveness4.6.1Conjoining4.6.2Embedding4.7Beyond the Sentence4.7.1Sentential Connection4.7.2Cohesion4.7.3CoherenceChapter 5Meaning5.1Meanings of “Meaning”5.2The Referential Theory5.3Sense Relations5.3.1Synonymy5.3.2Antonymy5.3.3Hyponymy5.4Componential Analysis5.5Sentence Meaning5.5.1Cognitive Semantics5.5.2Logical SemanticsChapter 6Language and Cognition6.1What Is Cognition?6.2Three Approaches to Language and
    Cognition6.3What Is Psycholinguistics?6.4Language Acquisition6.4.1Holophrastic Stage6.4.2TwoWord Stage6.4.3Stage of ThreeWord Utterances6.4.4Fluent Grammatical Conversation Stage6.5Language Comprehension6.5.1Word Recognition 6.5.2Comprehension of Sentences 6.5.3Comprehension of Text 6.6Language Production6.6.1Access to Words 6.6.2Generation of Sentences 6.6.3Written Language Production 6.7What Is Cognitive Linguistics?6.8Construal and Construal Operations6.8.1Attention/Salience6.8.2Judgment/Comparison6.8.3Perspective/Situatedness6.9Categorization6.9.1Basic level6.9.2Superordinate level6.9.3Subordinate level6.10Image Schemas6.11Metaphor6.11.1Structural Metaphors6.11.2Orientational Metaphors6.11.3Ontological Metaphors6.12Metonymy6.12.1Whole ICM and Its Part(s)6.12.2Parts of an ICM6.13Blending TheoryChapter 7Language, Culture, and Society7.1Language and Culture7.1.1How Does Language Relate to
    Culture?7.1.2More about the SapirWhorf
    Hypothesis7.1.3Case Studies7.1.4To What Extent Do We Need Culture
    in Our Linguistic Study?7.1.5Culture in Language Teaching
    Classroom7.2Language and Society7.2.1How Does Language Relate to
    Society?7.2.2A Situationally and Socially Variationist
    Perspective7.2.3What Should We Know More about
    Sociolinguistics?7.2.4What Implications Can We Get from
    Sociolinguistics?7.3CrossCultural Communication7.3.1What Should We Know All about
    CrossCultural Communication?7.3.2Case Studies7.4SummaryChapter 8Language in Use8.1Speech Act Theory8.1.1Performatives and Constatives8.1.2A Theory of the Illocutionary Act8.2The Theory of Conversational Implicature8.2.1The Cooperative Principle8.2.2Violation of the Maxims8.2.3Characteristics of Implicature8.3PostGricean Developments8.3.1Relevance Theory8.3.2The Q and Rprinciples8.3.3The Q, I and Mprinciples8.3.4A SocioCognitive ApproachChapter 9Language and Literature9.1Introduction9.2Some General Features of the Literary
    Language9.2.1Foregrounding and the Grammatical
    Form9.2.2Literal Language and Figurative
    Language9.2.3The Analysis of Literary Language9.3The Language in Poetry9.3.1Sound Patterning9.3.2Different Forms of Sound Patterning9.3.3Stress and Metrical Patterning9.3.4Conventional Forms of Metre and
    Sound9.3.5The Poetic Functions of Sound and
    Metre9.3.6How to Analyse Poetry?9.4The Language in Fiction9.4.1Fictional Prose and Point of View9.4.2Speech and Thought Presentation9.4.3Prose Style9.4.4How to Analyse the Language of
    Fiction?9.5The Language in Drama9.5.1How Should We Analyse Drama?9.5.2Analysing Dramatic Language9.5.3How to Analyse Dramatic Texts?9.6The Cognitive Approach to Literature9.6.1Theoretical Background9.6.2An Example of Cognitive AnalysisChapter 10Language and Computer10.1Introduction 10.2ComputerAssisted Instruction(CAI)10.2.1CAI, CAL, CALL10.2.2CALL Development and Technology10.2.3MOOC10.3Machine Translation10.3.1History of Development10.3.2Research Methods10.3.3MT and the Internet10.3.4Speech Translation10.3.5MT and Human Translation10.3.6MT Quality10.4Corpus Linguistics10.4.1Definition10.4.2Criticisms and the Revival of Corpus
    Linguistics10.4.3Concordance10.4.4Text Encoding and Annotation10.4.5The Roles of Corpus Data10.5Computer Mediated Communication10.5.1Mail and News10.5.2PowerPoint 10.5.3Blog10.5.4Chatroom, Facebook, WeChat 10.5.5Emoticons and SmileysChapter 11Second and Foreign Language Teaching11.1Introduction11.2Language Learning11.2.1Grammar in Language Learning11.2.2Input in Language Learning11.2.3Interlanguage in Language Learning11.3Language Teaching11.3.1The DiscourseBased View of Language
    Teaching11.3.2The Universal Grammar and Language
    Teaching11.4Syllabus Design11.4.1A Clarification of Terms: Syllabus and
    Curriculum 11.4.2Theoretical Views Behind Syllabus
    Design11.4.3Types of Syllabus11.4.4Current Trends in Syllabus Design11.5Contrastive Analysis and Error Analysis11.5.1Contrastive Analysis (CA)11.5.2Error Analysis (EA)11.6The Use of Corpus in Language Teaching11.6.1Types of Corpora11.6.2The Uses of Corpora11.7Foreign Language Education Policy11.8SummaryChapter 12Theories and Schools of Modern Linguistics12.1Introduction12.2The Prague School12.2.1Introduction12.2.2Phonology and Phonological
    Oppositions12.2.3Functional Sentence Perspective (FSP)12.3The London School12.3.1Malinowski’s Theories12.3.2Firth’s Theories12.3.3Halliday and SystemicFunctional
    Grammar12.3.4Appliable Linguistics12.4American Structuralism12.4.1Early Period: Boas and Sapir12.4.2Bloomfield’s Theory12.4.3PostBloomfieldian Linguistics12.5TransformationalGenerative Grammar12.5.1The Innateness Hypothesis12.5.2What Is a Generative Grammar?12.5.3The Classical Theory12.5.4The Standard Theory12.5.5The Extended Standard Theory12.5.6The Government and Binding Theory12.5.7The Minimalist Program and After12.5.8Chomsky’s Fundamental Contribution12.6Revisionists or Rebels?12.6.1Case Grammar12.6.2Generative SemanticsBibliographyGlossary and Index
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