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PHONETIC AND PHONOLOGICAL PROBLEMS

Non-linguistic typology

  • Linguistic typology

    Non-linguistic typology is the subject matter of the sciences except linguistics. It can be political typology, medical, historical, botanic, psychological, mathematical or economic typology as well. General and solitary differences and similarities are typical of all sciences. Some branches isolate systemic comparison into an independent sub-branch under a more general science: e.g. comparative psychology first mentioned in the works of Aristotle who described psychological similarities between animals and human beings. One the most well-known representatives of Comparative Psycho­logy was Charles Darwin3.
    Comparative Pedagogy deals with general and distinctive features, development trends and prospective of theory, applied instruction and upbringing methods, re­veals their economic, social political and philosophic backgrounds.
    Historical typology analyzes historical facts and produces comparative inventory based on the history of each nation/ethnicity to reveal general trends, differences, and similarities. E.g. based on the French revolution of 1848 the major signs of revolution­ary situation were revealed.
    Literary criticism of rapid development in the second half of the XIXth century simultaneously with the development of comparative linguistics. In Russia, the representatives of comparative linguistics were P.M. Samarin, V.M. Jirmunskiy, M.P. Alekseev, N.I. Conrad, I.G. Neupokoeva, etc.
    The two sciences — Comparative Typology and Literary criticism have a number of similarities:

    • linguistic comparison deals with identifying universal principles of the comparative description of the systems of national languages. Literary criti­cism establishes general principles of typological description of national literature;

    • both sciences deal with identifying systemic features and discover typological isomorphism which can be conditioned structurally, genetically and geographically, etc.

    Comparative typology is one of the branches of General Linguistics, which studies the systems of languages comparatively, also finds common laws of languages and establishes differences and similarities between them. Moreover, due to David Crystal’s book “Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics”, Comparative Typology is explained in this way: “A branch of linguistics which studies the structural similarities between languages, regardless of their history, as part of an attempt to establish satisfactory classification or typology of languages. Typological comparison is thus distinguished from the historical comparison of languages […] and its groupings may not coincide with those set up by the historical method”4.
    The most popular definition of the subject matter seems to be “Comparative Typol­ogy” is a branch of General Linguistics, field of a study aiming at identifying such simi­larities and distinctive features of languages that do not depend on genetic origin or influence of languages on one another. Typology strives to identify and look at the most significant features that affect other spheres of language systems, e.g. the way of the junction of meaningful parts of the word or the so-called structure of the sentence in the language. Typological studies base on materials of representative sampling from many world languages so that the findings and conclusions made on the results of such analysis can be applied to the entire majority of languages (in cases of language universals).
    Comparative typology shows special interest in the so-called exotic or non-studied languages, e.g. languages of ethnicities of South-East Asia, Africa, Ocean side or American Indian tribes. Still, the data of well-known, expanded and well-studied languages of the similar extent become the subject matter of a typological study.
    Comparative typology not only systemizes, generalizes and classifies the facts of language isomorphism and allomorphism but also explains them.
    The majority of prestigious linguistic theories have their own typological agenda aimed at theoretical analysis of structurally different languages, their location, and genetic origin.
    Nowadays many terms are used for defining this very type of sciences, such as Linguistic Typology, Comparative Typology, and Contrastive Linguistucs, Characterology and so on. However, analyzing historical background, we will be able to understand the main notion of this branch of Linguistics.


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