Prague School
Prague school, school of
linguistic thought and analysis established in Prague in the 1920s by Vilém Mathesius. It included among its most
prominent members the Russian linguist Nikolay Trubetskoy and the Russian-born
American linguist Roman Jakobson; the school was most active during the 1920s
and ’30s. Linguists of the Prague school stress
the function of elements within language, the contrast of language elements to
one another, and the total pattern or system formed by these contrasts, and
they have distinguished themselves in the study of sound systems.
They developed distinctive-feature analysis of sounds; by this analysis, each
distinctive sound in a language is seen as composed of a number of contrasting
articulatory and acoustic features, and any two sounds of a language that are
perceived as being distinct will have at least one feature contrast in their
compositions. The concept of distinctive-feature analysis in studying the sound
systems of languages has been incorporated within the standard model of transformational grammar.
The Prague school is also
renowned for its interest in the application of functionalism—the study of how
elements of a language accomplish cognition, expression, and conation—to syntax
and the structure of literary texts.
Collection - Anil S Awad
English NET/SET Consultant
9922113364/9423403368
anilawad@gmail.com
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