1) Phonetics, Phonology: This is the level
of sounds. One must distinguish here between the set of possible human sounds,
which constitutes the area of phonetics proper, and the set of system sounds
used in a given human language, which constitutes the area of phonology.
Phonology is concerned with classifying the sounds of language and with saying
how the subset used in a language is utilized, for instance what distinctions
in meaning can be made on the basis of what sounds.
2) Morphology:
This is the level of words and endings, to put it in simplified terms. It is
what one normally understands by grammar (along with syntax). The term
morphology refers to the analysis of minimal forms in language which are,
however, themselves comprised of sounds and which are used to construct words
which have either a grammatical or a lexical function.
Lexicology
is concerned with the study of the lexicon from a formal point of view and is
thus closely linked to (derivational) morphology.
3) Syntax: This is the level
of sentences. It is concerned with the meanings of words in combination with
each other to form phrases or sentences. In particular, it involves differences
in meaning arrived at by changes in word order, the addition or subtraction of
words from sentences or changes in the form of sentences. It furthermore deals
with the relatedness of different sentence types and with the analysis of
ambiguous sentences.
Language typology
attempts to classify languages according to high-order principles of morphology
and syntax and to make sets of generalizations across different languages
irrespective of their genetic affiliations, i.e. of what language family they
belong to.
4) Semantics: This is the area
of meaning. It might be thought that semantics is covered by the areas of
morphology and syntax, but it is quickly seen that this level needs to be
studied on its own to have a proper perspective on meaning in language. Here
one touches, however, on practically every other level of language as well as
there exists lexical, grammatical, sentence and utterance meaning.
5)
Pragmatics The concern here is with the use of language in specific
situations. The meaning of sentences need not be the same in an abstract form
and in practical use. In the latter case one speaks of utterance meaning. The
area of pragmatics relies strongly for its analyses on the notion of speech act
which is concerned with the actual performance of language. This involves the
notion of proposition – roughly the content of a sentence – and the intent and
effect of an utterance.
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