The language - SimPle SCienCe

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Wednesday, February 7, 2018

The language

The language
The language

 The ancient people knew the language as the voices of all people for their purposes and modern definitions of language cannot go beyond this objective definition, and that the definition of language in its function differs from its definition of its truth and its relationship to man. The psychologists knew the language, they saw it as a set of signals suitable to express feelings, ie about the cases of human intellectual, emotional and voluntary , Or it is the means by which any image or intellectual idea can be analyzed into its parts or characteristics, which can be installed again in our minds and the minds of others, by composing words and placing them in a special arrangement.

A tool to communicate:

Communication
Communication
Another definition is that language is a system of communication that can exchange verbal or symbolic words. This definition emphasizes the social functions of language. The truth is that humans use language to express themselves and to deal with things in the environment around them. The functional theories of the grammar show the grammatical structures of their communicative functions and the understanding of grammatical structures of the language to be the result of grammatical adjustment and "tailored" to meet the communication needs of its users. This view is linked to language with language study in practical, cognitive, and interactive frameworks, as well as in social linguistics and linguistics. Functional theories tend to study rules as vital phenomena, and structures are always in the process of change as used by their spokesmen. This view places importance on the study of language classification, classification of languages according to structural features, and it can be demonstrated that grammar processes tend to follow paths that depend in part on classification. Pragmatic views are often associated with language philosophy as an essential element of language and meaning with the subsequent work of Wittgenstein and with ordinary linguists such as Austin, Paul Grace, John Searle, and Quinn. 

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