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LANGUAGE AND CULTURE


Enviado por   •  27 de Febrero de 2013  •  820 Palabras (4 Páginas)  •  462 Visitas

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LANGUAGE AND CULTURE

In the culture, the language is literally everywhere; in the context, language and culture are clearly fused, one reflects the other. Language embodies the products, practices, perspectives, communities, and persons of a culture, language are a product of the culture, as any other, but are also plays a distinct role. Members of the culture have created the language to carry out all their cultural products, and to name the underlying cultural perspectives in all the various communities that comprise their culture.

The words of the language, its expressions, structures, sounds, and scripts reflect the culture; to practice the culture, we also need language, we need to be able to express ourselves and to communicate with members of the culture as we engage with them in the myriad practices and products that make up their way of life, according to the expectations of the members of the culture. This is the language of self, expression, communication, and social interaction. It is based on all the complexity this entails.

• Products: the language used to describe and manipulate cultural products.

• Practices: the language used to participate in cultural practices.

• Perspectives: the language used to identify, explain, and justify cultural perspectives.

• Communities: the language used to participate appropriately in specific cultural communities.

• Persons: the language individuals use to express their unique identity within the culture.

LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL PRODUCTS: the products of a culture range from isolated objects, artifacts, or tools to places complex social institutions, and other construct ions, like art, literature, architecture, and music.

Remember, too, that language is a cultural product in and of itself. Words, expressions and structures are continually added or discarded. Theist tangible forms, as with any cultural product, can be described through language. Linguistic terms as noun, verb, complement, alphabet, phoneme, syllable, determiner, and relative clause stand alongside linguistic processes such as questions formation, subject- verb agreement, pluralization, inflections and like.

LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL PRACTICES: use of language in culture occurs in cultural practices, the actions and interactions between and among members of the culture demand speaking and listening and, in literate cultures, reading or writing. The language can be simple or quite complicated, depending on the nature of the practice in questions.

LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL COMMUNITIES: When we situate language in specific communities or groups, we see variations in forms, meanings, and use according to these social setting and circumstances. Communities develop distinct language to describe and carry out the particular practices and products associated with their group and its activities. We combined with cultural practices; communities also define norms for language use.

LANGUAGE AND PERSONS: Finally, language,

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