Stratificational linguistics
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Stratificational Linguistics is a view of linguistics advocated by Sydney Lamb. His theories advocate that language usage and production is stratificational in nature.
Specifically, that there are separate 'strata' or levels in the brain used for language. Each level provides actualization or 'realization' for the next higher level, and the elements on its level are similar to each other. Several strata are involved in the production of a sound from an initial idea.
Some strata include:
- Phoneme as the unit on the Phonemic strata.
- Lexeme as a unit on the Lexical strata.
- Morpheme as the unit on the Morphemic strata
- Sememe as the unit on the Semantic strata.
[edit] External links
- A Stratificational Approach to Making Macaroni and Cheese: It has long been a tenet of stratificational theory that stratificational notation is adaptable to extralinguistic structures.