ABSTRACT

This Routledge Classics edition includes a new foreword by the author.

‘An excellent and very welcome guide to psycholinguistics…highly recommended.’
The Washington Post

A classic in its field for almost forty years, The Articulate Mammal is a brilliant introduction to psycholinguistics. In lucid prose Jean Aitchison introduces and demystifies a complex and controversial subject: What is language and is it restricted to humans? How do children acquire language so quickly? Is language innate or learned? She explains the pioneering work of Noam Chomsky; how children become acclimatized to speech rhythms before birth; the acquisition of verbs; construction and cognitive grammar; and aphasia and dementia. She also considers new topics such as language and evolution and the possibility of a ‘language gene’, bringing the field right up to date.

Jean Aitchison was Professor of Language and Communication at the University of Oxford from 1993 to 2003, and is now an Emeritus Professorial Fellow at Worcester College, Oxford. She is the author of numerous books on language and gave the 1996 BBC Reith lectures on the topic of ‘The Language Web’.


 

chapter |16 pages

The Great Automatic Grammatizator

Need anything be innate?

chapter |23 pages

Animals that Try to Talk

Is language restricted to humans?

chapter |19 pages

Grandmama's Teeth

Is there biological evidence for innate language capacity?

chapter |24 pages

Predestinate Grooves

Is there a pre-ordained language ‘programme'?

chapter |17 pages

A Blueprint in the Brain?

Could any linguistic information conceivably be innate?

chapter |23 pages

Chattering Children

How do children get started on learning to speak?

chapter |28 pages

Puzzling it Out

Exactly how do children learn language?

chapter |16 pages

Celestial Unintelligibility

Why do linguists propose such bizarre grammars?

chapter |18 pages

The White Elephant Problem

Do we need a grammar in order to speak?

chapter |27 pages

The Case of the Missing Fingerprint

How do we understand speech?

chapter |22 pages

The Cheshire Cat's Grin

How do we plan and produce speech?

chapter |6 pages

Banker's Clerk or Hippopotamus?

The future