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Linguistics

Linguistics is the scientific study of language, encompassing its structure, use, acquisition, and variation. It aims to describe how languages are organized and how they are learned and used by people. Linguists analyze sounds, words, sentences, and meanings, and explore how languages change over time and differ across communities. The field covers all human languages and seeks general principles that apply across languages.

Major subfields include phonetics and phonology, which study speech sounds; morphology, which examines word formation; syntax,

Key concepts include grammar as the tacit rules underlying language use, competence versus performance, and the

Methods range from fieldwork and elicitation of native speaker data to experimental studies, corpus analysis, and

which
analyzes
sentence
structure;
and
semantics
and
pragmatics,
which
address
meaning
and
use
in
context.
Other
branches
focus
on
sociolinguistics,
psycholinguistics,
neurolinguistics,
historical
and
typological
linguistics,
computational
linguistics,
and
corpus
linguistics,
each
approaching
language
from
different
theoretical
or
practical
angles.
search
for
universal
features
of
language.
Descriptive
linguistics
models
language
as
it
is
spoken,
while
prescriptive
norms
judge
how
it
ought
to
be
used.
Languages
vary
by
phonology,
morphology,
syntax,
and
lexicon,
yet
share
common
structural
constraints.
computational
modeling.
Data
are
often
annotated
and
stored
in
corpora
for
large-scale
analysis.
Interdisciplinary
work
connects
linguistics
with
psychology,
computer
science,
anthropology,
and
neuroscience,
informing
technologies
such
as
speech
recognition,
machine
translation,
and
language
education
and
policy.