Difference between revisions of "Descriptive linguistics"

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Revision as of 15:05, 22 January 2009

Descriptive linguistics is a general term for the activity of describing the structures of particular languages.

Comments

Descriptive linguistics is sometimes contrasted with theoretical linguistics, but it would seem that the better contrast is with general linguistics. Descriptive linguistics is devoted to the description of particular languages (with more or less theoretical sophistication, but never atheoretically), and general linguistics studies language in general.

Origin

The term apparently originated in the 1930s in North America. An influential early textbook was Gleason (1955).

  • "One approach has...received little attention until very recently: descriptive linguistics, the discipline which studies languages in terms of their internal structures." (Gleason 1955:v)

References

  • Gleason, H. Allan. 1955. An introduction to descriptive linguistics. New York: Henry Holt and Company.

Other languages

French linguistque descriptive German deskriptive Linguistik