Ask your own question, for FREE!
English 14 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

All languages have which of the following in common? Select all that apply. a pattern of sounds elements of grammar a fixed pattern of subject-verb agreement a collection of words a fixed syntactical ordering a system of word arrangement a system of prefixes and suffixes

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@ofishin98

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@PaulaLovesSchool13

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Let me think for a bit :)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

ok :)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@Jesus.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Now don't choose A or B

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Any linguistic answer to this question has to be at least partly theory laden. There are many approaches to linguistic universals. The most general points would be: 1. All natural languages can be acquired by people born into a community of speakers, or learned by people as a second language (with well-known limitations). 2. The propositional content of all natural languages can be translated from one another given limitations of vocabulary and contextual understanding. 3. The non-propositional content of all languages can be conveyed between one another through some means of human communication. From the above it follows that all languages will have the same physiological, cognitive, and neural underpinnings (whatever those may be). However, that seems quite trivial. So when people ask those questions, they are generally looking for some feature like nouns, vocabulary, syntactic constraints. Here the people making the strongest claims are: Universal Grammar which claims that all languages share certain constraints on their syntax which are the only way to explain their learnability. However, there are only a handful of these and those are virtually incomprehensible. This is a position most often associated with Chomsky and most popularly explained by Steven Pinker. Semantic Primes claims that there are about 60 words that are common to all languages and through which all meaning can be described (they call this Natural Semantic Metalanguage). It is based around the work of Anna Wierzbicka and the group does some really interesting research even if their broader claim is a bit less palatable. Modern linguistic typology (whose perspective was taken on in @Darkgamma's answer) makes much weaker claims few of which stand and fall with a single counter example. The most accessible explication of this position is RMW Dixon's 'Basic Linguistic Theory' which, while not always most uptodate on all issues, gives an accessible overview (over three volumes). Historically, this work on universals was associated with Joseph Greenberg but now the project is much less interested in universals than common patterns and tendencies. Historical linguistics also makes some claims about universals mostly to do with common origins. The strongest claims are made by some branches which try to find common origins of all languages, e.g. Nostratics, who are not necessarily taken seriously by the mainstream. But even more traditional historical linguistics makes some claims about fairly universal principles of language change. By the way, both 3 and 4 sometimes call themselves comparative linguistics, so it's sometimes hard to know what is meant by the term without some context. Personally, I recommend that every linguist or even anybody interested in language spends some time with modern linguistic typology (which has moved far beyond the inflectional/agglutinting business). While Dixon's 'Basic Linguistic Theory' may not be the first thing on the list, it should be required reading for any linguistics graduates long before they read anything by Chomsky. Finally, The World Atlas of Linguistic Structures (WALS) http://wals.info is a great place to check any claims as to universality, even if it (unavoidably) relies on data of uneven quality. But it also nicely illustrates the extent and the limitations of the current evidentiary base for claims about universals. Maybe this will help not good with this one. http://linguistics.stackexchange.com/questions/8564/what-do-all-languages-have-in-common

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@ofishin98 has good information

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so paula the rest is the answer

OpenStudy (anonymous):

except the first 2

OpenStudy (anonymous):

the first two are totally not right

OpenStudy (anonymous):

and the rest is?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@PaulaLovesSchool13

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I think letter E is the answer...I could be wrong

OpenStudy (anonymous):

...? Are you confused?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes

OpenStudy (anonymous):

It says to select all that apply.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

|dw:1409839784903:dw|

Can't find your answer? Make a FREE account and ask your own questions, OR help others and earn volunteer hours!

Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!
Can't find your answer? Make a FREE account and ask your own questions, OR help others and earn volunteer hours!

Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!