Total Pageviews

Monday, December 21, 2020

Course in modern linguistics : C.F. Hockett

Hockett, Charles Francis.

Course in modern linguistics.

New York, Macmillan [1958]
(OCoLC)583123779

 1. Introduction --

2. Phonemes --
3. Phonemic notation --
4. English intonation --
5. English accent --
6. English juncture --
7. Phonetics --
8. Contoid articulations --
9. Vocoid articulations; timing and coordination --
10. Phonemic arrangements; redundancy --
11. Types of phonemic systems --
12. Phonemic analysis --
13. Phonemes and sound --
14. Morphemes --
15. Morphemes and phonemes --
16. The design of a language --
17. Immediate constituents --
18. Form classes and constructions --
19. Words --
20. Morphology and syntax --
21. Syntactical construction-types: endocentric --
22. Syntactical construction-types: exocentric --
23. Sentences and clauses --
24. Inflection --
25. Kinds of syntactical linkage --
26. Parts of speech --
27. Grammatical categories --
28. Derivation --
29. Surface and deep grammar --
30. Substitutes --
31. The grammatical core --
32. Morphophonemics --
33. Types of alternation --
34. Canonical forms and economy --
35. Secondary effects of phonemic shapes --
36. Idiom formation --
37. Types of idioms --
38. Idiolect, dialect, language --
39. Common core and overall pattern --
40. American English stressed syllabics --
41. Linguistic ontogeny --
42. Phylogenetic change --
43. Old and Middle English --
44. Kinds of phylogenetic change --
45. Mechanisms of phylogenetic change --
46. Innovation and survival --
47. The conditions for borrowing --
48. Kinds of loans --
49. Adaptation and impact --
50. Analogical creation --
51. Further varieties of analogy --
52. The nature of sound change --
53. Coalescence and split --
54. The consequences of sound change --
55. Internal reconstruction --
56. Dialect geography --
57. The comparative method --
58. Reconstructing phonemics --
59. Reconstructing morphophonemics and grammar --
60. Further results of the comparative method --
61. Glottochronology --
62. Writing --
63. Literature --
64. Man's place in nature.

No comments:

Post a Comment