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Documenti di Professioni
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INTRODUCTION
Anthropological
between language and
linguistics
culture
is
and
the
the
study
of
relations
the
relations
between human
biology, cognition and language. This strongly overlaps the field of linguistic
anthropology,
which
is
the
branch
of
anthropology
that
studies
linguistic
anthropology
also
has
implications
for sociology and self-organization of peoples. Study of the Penan people, for
instance, reveals that their language employs six different and distinct words
whose best English translation is "we".[citation
needed]
Anthropological linguistics
studies these distinctions, and relates them to types of societies and to actual
bodily adaptation to the senses, much as it studies distinctions made in languages
regarding the colours of the rainbow: seeing the tendency to increase the diversity
of terms, as evidence that there are distinctions that bodies in this
environment must make, leading tosituated knowledge and perhaps a situated
ethics, whose final evidence is the differentiated set of terms used to denote "we".
CHAPTER II
DISCUSSION
A. Definition of Anthropological Linguistic
Anthropological
linguistics,
study
of
the
relationship
between language and culture; it usually refers to work on languages that have
no
written
records.
In
the
United
States
close
relationship
Alijahbana (1977) by following the idea of Humboldt who said that language
is not just a communication tool. Alisjahbana shows the relationship of
language and culture by saying that language is the embodiment of culture.
Suharno (1982)) using a similar term cultural linguistic understanding with
Anthropological Linguistic proposed by Alisjahbana. If Alisjahbana more
focused studies on language planning, the focus Suharno charge cultural
linguistic concepts on the introduction of new models in the study of
language. Suharno says: "The term Cultural Linguistics .... showed something
new .... The dimakksudkan with something here is the field of attention and
expectation of doing pioneering of new horizons of language study, which is
based culture .. .. "
Anthropological
Linguistic
is
intended
in
this
study
Foley
CHAPTER III
CONCLUSION
Anthropological
linguistics,
study
of
the
relationship
between language and culture; it usually refers to work on languages that have no
written
records.
In
the
United
States
close
relationship
REFERENCES
Becker, A.L. daa Yengoyan, A.A. (eds). 1979. The Imagination of Reality: Essays
in the Southeast Asian Coherence Systems. New Jersey: ABLEX
Publishing Coorporaton.
Barker, Ch. 2004. Cultural Studies, Teori & Praktik (Terjemahan oleh Nurhadi).
Yogyakarta: Kreasi Wacana.
Duranti, A. 1997. Linguistic Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Foley, W. A. 1997. Anthropological
Blackwell Publishers.
Linguistics: An
Introduction.Oxford: