The function of phonological rules in our life is to avoid misunderstanding and miscommunication words
english is been refers to as a standardization language because during the 7th and 8th centuries,the germanic tribes needed rules and orders to abide by in spelling the language?
When someone asks you to write or speak 'in English', they mean to use the English language, spelling, and grammar rules. Conversely, if a form in France asked you to fill out the form 'in French', you would need to write in French, using French spelling and grammar rules. The meaning, therefore, is similar no matter what language is asked.
English has become a second language and the standard language of business in many parts of the world. It may not be the best choice because it contains so many exceptions to the rules.
Yes, but each language has its own rules. English and French have a signifegent change in the grammar. 'La porte rouge' (French) in English would be 'the door red', and not 'the red door'. 'Die tur rot' (German) would be the same as English, but different in French or Greek.
English grammar is the rules of the language - things like "verbs and nouns agree in number" or "the goes in front of the noun not after it". English literature is books, etc, written in English.
You can have complete phonological access to a word and not have lexical access to that word when it is foreign to the native language. ?æThen native language will try to assimilate the new word to fit its grammatical rules, but some foreign words are to foreign to assimilated completely within the rules.?æ
Every language is different, isn't it. It makes them different, unique, diverse and special in their own way.
Yes, people learning English as a second language often make mistakes when applying the grammar rules of their native language to English. This is because the grammatical structures and rules can be different between languages. These mistakes are known as language transfer or interference errors.
Unfortunately, English IS my mother tongue.
Each language has a different phonology, or system of sounds. All words in a language must fit in with the rules and patterns of the language's phonology. For example, in English, no word begins with the 'ng' sound, though in many languages it is possible to begin words with this sound. Even though onomatopoeic words may be similar across languages, each language will form onomatopoeic words that fit in with the usual phonological patterns of the language, and these patterns differ across languages.
Jonathan Swift wanted a regulating body for the English language. He wanted a set of rules for English.
No, no language is perfect. English grammar is full of 'rules' with exceptions, almost random seeming sometimes. English also uses a lot of stranger idioms.
By the rules of English language, but also to remember the exceptions.
I know of 49 but there might be more.
english is been refers to as a standardization language because during the 7th and 8th centuries,the germanic tribes needed rules and orders to abide by in spelling the language?
Language and speech are not the same thing but are closely related. Language is the process of finding the words stored in your brain and constructing sentences or utterances. Speech is the physical part which enables the words found to be spoken. There can be problems is both or either of these areas which can affect communication. Language is made up of 3 parts: symantics - word meaning Symantics is the CONTENT of language. syntax - word order, Syntax is the FORM of language. pragmatics - the USE of language in context Speech is actual sound production. It includes articuation and phonology. Articulation errors include sound substitutions, sound omissions and sound distortions. Phonological errors result when a child has not learned the rules for combining sounds in language which results in the use of phonological processes. Phonological processes include syllable reduction, omitting initial sounds, omitting final sounds, reducing clusters (for example, "nake" for "snake"), Just google "phonological processes" for the rest of these. For really young kids, each of these patterns can be part of normal development. However, when they linger after age three, a child may need intervention.
I guess there are no rules for good language as language is changing all the time. if your talking about English, there's standard English with grammar and to pronounce every letter in the word (mostly!). but most people just talk whichever ways easiest for them, and that changes language, so no one really knows. :s