Document Type
Book
Publication Date
2010
Published In
Language Matters: A Guide To Everyday Questions About Language
Abstract
Is Ebonics really a dialect or simply bad English? Do women and men speak differently? Will computers ever really learn human language? Does offensive language harm children? These are only a few of the issues surrounding language that crop up every day. Most of us have very definite opinions on these questions one way or another. Yet as linguists Donna Jo Napoli and Vera Lee-Schoenfeld point out in this short and thoroughly readable volume, many of our most deeply held ideas about the nature of language and its role in our lives are either misconceived or influenced by myths and stereotypes "Language Matters provides a highly informative tour of the world of language, examining these and other vexing and controversial language-related questions. Throughout, Napoli and Lee-Schoenfeld encourage and lead the reader to use common sense and everyday experience rather than preconceived notions or technical linguistic expertise. Both their questions and their conclusions are surprising, sometimes provocative, and always entertaining. This thoroughly revised second edition updates the book with a new coauthor and includes new chapters on language and power, language extinction, and what it is linguists actually do. Language Matters is sure to engage both general readers and students of language and linguistics at any level.
Edition
2nd ed
Published By
Oxford University Press
Recommended Citation
Donna Jo Napoli and V. Lee-Schoenfeld. (2010). Language Matters: A Guide To Everyday Questions About Language. 2nd ed.
https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-linguistics/60
Comments
Chapter four of this work has been made freely available courtesy of Oxford University Press.
This material was originally published in Language Matters: A Guide To Everyday Questions About Language by Donna Jo Napoli and Vera Lee-Schoenfeld, and has been reproduced by permission of Oxford University Press. For permission to reuse this material, please visit http://global.oup.com/academic/rights.