Theoretical linguistics
Template:Short description Template:Sidebar with collapsible lists Theoretical linguistics is a term in linguistics that,<ref name="Ivić_etal_2020">Template:Cite book</ref> like the related term general linguistics,<ref name="Graffi_20092">Template:Cite book</ref> can be understood in different ways. Both can be taken as a reference to the theory of language, or the branch of linguistics that inquires into the nature of language and seeks to answer fundamental questions as to what language is, or what the common ground of all languages is.<ref name="Graffi_20092" /> The goal of theoretical linguistics can also be the construction of a general theoretical framework for the description of language.<ref name="Ivić_etal_2020" />
Another use of the term depends on the organisation of linguistics into different sub-fields. The term 'theoretical linguistics' is commonly juxtaposed with applied linguistics.<ref name="Harris_2001">Template:Cite journal</ref> This perspective implies that the aspiring language professional, e.g. a student, must first learn the theory i.e. properties of the linguistic system, or what Ferdinand de Saussure called internal linguistics.<ref name="Saussure_1959">Template:Cite book</ref> This is followed by practice, or studies in the applied field. The dichotomy is not fully unproblematic because language pedagogy, language technology and other aspects of applied linguistics also include theory.<ref name="Harris_2001" />
Similarly, the term general linguistics is used to distinguish core linguistics from other types of study. However, because college and university linguistics is largely distributed with the institutes and departments of a relatively small number of national languages, some larger universities also offer courses and research programmes in 'general linguistics' which may cover exotic and minority languages, cross-linguistic studies and various other topics outside the scope of the main philological departments.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Fields of linguistics properEdit
When the concept of theoretical linguistics is taken to refer to core or internal linguistics, it means the study of the parts of the language system. This traditionally means phonology, morphology, syntax and semantics. Pragmatics and discourse can also be included; delimitation varies between institutions. Furthermore, Saussure's definition of general linguistics consists of the dichotomy of synchronic and diachronic linguistics, thus including historical linguistics as a core issue.<ref name="Saussure_1959" />
Linguistic theoriesEdit
Template:See alsoThere are various frameworks of linguistic theory which include a general theory of language and a general theory of linguistic description.<ref name="ScienceDirect">Linguistic Theory ScienceDirect. Retrieved 19 May 2023.</ref> Current humanistic approaches include theories within structural linguistics and functional linguistics. In addition to the humanistic approaches of structural linguistics and functional linguistics, the field of theoretical linguistics encompasses other frameworks and perspectives. Evolutionary linguistics is one such framework that investigates the origins and development of language from an evolutionary and cognitive perspective. It incorporates various models within generative grammar, which seeks to explain language structure through formal rules and transformations. Cognitive linguistics and cognitive approaches to grammar, on the other hand, focuses on the relationship between language and cognition, exploring how language reflects and influences our thought processes.<ref name="ScienceDirect"/>