What is Language?

Site: Saylor Academy
Course: BUS210: Business Communication
Book: What is Language?
Printed by: Guest user
Date: Tuesday, April 23, 2024, 3:35 AM

Description

Read these sections, which discuss the role of words in delivering your message and how language is a system of words. Idea-conveying symbols are ruled by syntax, semantics, and context – all of which require interpretation. After you read, try the exercises at the end of the section.

Delivering Your Message

Good communication is as stimulating as black coffee and just as hard to sleep after.

- Anne Morrow Lindbergh

The meanings of words are not in the words; they are in us.

- S. I. Hayakawa


Getting Started

Introductory Exercises
  1. Can you match the words to their meaning?
1. phat A. Weird, strange, unfair, or not acceptable
2. dis B. Something stupid or thoughtless, deserving correction
3. wack C. Excellent, together, cool
4. smack D. Old car, generally in poor but serviceable condition
5. down E. Insult, put down, to dishonor, to display disrespect
6. hooptie F. Get out or leave quickly
7. my bad G. Cool, very interesting, fantastic or amazing
8. player H. To be in agreement
9. tight I. Personal mistake
10. jet J. Person dating with multiple partners, often unaware of each other

  1. Do people use the same language in all settings and contexts? Your first answer might be "sure," but try this test. For a couple of hours, or even a day, pay attention to how you speak, and how others speak: the words you say, how you say them, the pacing and timing used in each context. For example, at home in the morning, in the coffee shop before work or class, during a break at work with peers or a break between classes with classmates all count as contexts. Observe how and what language is used in each context and to what degree they are the same or different.
Answers
    1-C, 2-E, 3-A, 4-B, 5-H, 6-D, 7-I, 8-J, 9-G, 10-F

Successful business communication is often associated with writing and speaking well, being articulate or proficient with words. Yet, in the quote above, the famous linguist S. I. Hayakawa wisely observes that meaning lies within us, not in the words we use. Indeed, communication in this text is defined as the process of understanding and sharing meaning. An introduction to human communication: Understanding and sharing . Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill. When you communicate you are sharing meaning with one or more other people - this may include members of your family, your community, your work community, your school, or any group that considers itself a group.

How do you communicate? How do you think? We use language as a system to create and exchange meaning with one another, and the types of words we use influence both our perceptions and others interpretation of our meanings. What kinds of words would you use to describe your thoughts and feelings, your preferences in music, cars, food, or other things that matter to you?

Imagine that you are using written or spoken language to create a bridge over which you hope to transport meaning, much like a gift or package, to your receiver. You hope that your meaning arrives relatively intact, so that your receiver receives something like what you sent. Will the package look the same to them on the receiving end? Will they interpret the package, its wrapping and colors, the way you intended? That depends.

What is certain is that they will interpret it based on their framework of experience. The package represents your words arranged in a pattern that both the source (you) and the receiver (your audience) can interpret. The words as a package try to contain the meaning and deliver it intact, but they themselves are not the meaning. That lies within us.

So is the package empty? Are the words we use empty? Without us to give them life and meaning, the answer is yes. Knowing what words will correspond to meanings that your audience holds within themselves will help you communicate more effectively. Knowing what meanings lie within you is your door to understanding yourself.

This chapter discusses the importance of delivering your message in words. It examines how the characteristics of language interact in ways that can both improve and diminish effective business communication. We will examine how language plays a significant role in how you perceive and interact with the world, and how culture, language, education, gender, race, and ethnicity all influence this dynamic process. We will look at ways to avoid miscommunication and focus on constructive ways to get your message delivered to your receiver with the meaning you intended.


Source: http://saylordotorg.github.io/text_business-communication-for-success/s06-delivering-your-message.html
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License.

Messages

Learning Objectives

  1. Describe and define "language".
  2. Describe the role of language in perception and the communication process.

Are you reading this sentence? Does it make sense to you? When you read the words I wrote, what do you hear? A voice in your head? Words across the internal screen of your mind? If it makes sense, then you may very well hear the voice of the author as you read along, finding meaning in these arbitrary symbols packaged in discrete units called words. The words themselves have no meaning except that which you give them.

For example, I'll write the word "home," placing it in quotation marks to denote its separation from the rest of this sentence. When you read that word, what comes to mind for you? A specific place? Perhaps a building that could also be called a house? Images of people or another time? "Home," like "love" and many other words, is quite individual and open to interpretation.

Still, even though your mental image of home may be quite distinct from mine, we can communicate effectively. You understand that each sentence has a subject and verb, and a certain pattern of word order, even though you might not be consciously aware of that knowledge. You weren't born speaking or writing, but you mastered - or, more accurately, are still mastering as we all are - these important skills of self-expression. The family, group, or community wherein you were raised taught you the code. The code came in many forms. When do you say "please" or "thank you," and when do you remain silent? When is it appropriate to communicate? If it is appropriate, what are the expectations and how do you accomplish it? You know because you understand the code.

We often call this code " language": a system of symbols, words, and/or gestures used to communicate meaning. Does everyone on earth speak the same language? Obviously, no. People are raised in different cultures, with different values, beliefs, customs, and different languages to express those cultural attributes. Even people who speak the same language, like speakers of English in London, New Delhi, or Cleveland, speak and interact using their own words that are community-defined, self-defined, and have room for interpretation. Within the United States, depending on the context and environment, you may hear colorful sayings that are quite regional, and may notice an accent, pace, or tone of communication that is distinct from your own. This variation in our use of language is a creative way to form relationships and communities, but can also lead to miscommunication.

Words themselves, then, actually hold no meaning. It takes you and me to use them to give them life and purpose. Even if we say that the dictionary is the repository of meaning, the repository itself has no meaning without you or me to read, interpret, and use its contents. Words change meaning over time. "Nice" once meant overly particular or fastidious; today it means pleasant or agreeable. "Gay" once meant happy or carefree; today it refers to homosexuality. The dictionary entry for the meaning of a word changes because we change how, when, and why we use the word, not the other way around. Do you know every word in the dictionary? Does anyone? Even if someone did, there are many possible meanings of the words we exchange, and these multiple meanings can lead to miscommunication.

Business communication veterans often tell the story of a company that received an order of machine parts from a new vendor. When they opened the shipment, they found that it contained a small plastic bag into which the vendor had put several of the parts. When asked what the bag was for, the vendor explained, "Your contract stated a thousand units, with maximum 2 percent defective. We produced the defective units and put them in the bag for you". If you were the one reading that contract, what would "defective" mean to you? We may use a word intending to communicate one idea only to have a coworker miss our meaning entirely.

Sometimes we want our meaning to be crystal clear, and at other times, less so. We may even want to present an idea from a specific perspective, one that shows our company or business in a positive light. This may reflect our intentional manipulation of language to influence meaning, as in choosing to describe a car as "preowned" or an investment as a "unique value proposition". We may also influence other's understanding of our words in unintentional ways, from failing to anticipate their response, to ignoring the possible impact of our word choice.

Languages are living exchange systems of meaning, and are bound by context. If you are assigned to a team that coordinates with suppliers from Shanghai, China, and a sales staff in Dubuque, Iowa, you may encounter terms from both groups that influence your team.

As long as there have been languages and interactions between the people who speak them, languages have borrowed words (or, more accurately, adopted - for they seldom give them back). Think of the words "boomerang," "limousine," or "pajama"; do you know which languages they come from? Did you know that "algebra" comes from the Arabic word "al-jabr," meaning "restoration"?

Does the word "moco" make sense to you? It may not, but perhaps you recognize it as the name chosen by Nissan for one of its cars. "Moco" makes sense to both Japanese and Spanish speakers, but with quite different meanings. The letters come together to form an arbitrary word that refers to the thought or idea of the thing in the semantic triangle (see Figure 2.9 ).

Figure 2.1 Semantic Triangle



This triangle illustrates how the word (which is really nothing more than a combination of four letters) refers to the thought, which then refers to the thing itself. Who decides what "moco" means? To the Japanese, it may mean "cool design," or even "best friend," and may be an apt name for a small, cute car, but to a Spanish speaker, it means "booger" or "snot" - not a very appealing name for a car.

Each letter stands for a sound, and when they come together in a specific way, the sounds they represent when spoken express the "word" that symbolizes the event.  The basics of speech communication. For our discussion, the key word we need to address is "symbolizes". The word stands in for the actual event, but is not the thing itself. The meaning we associate with it may not be what we intended. For example, when Honda was contemplating the introduction of the Honda Fit, another small car, they considered the name "Fitta" for use in Europe. As the story goes, the Swedish Division Office of Honda explained that "fitta" in Swedish is a derogatory term for female reproductive organ. The name was promptly changed to "Jazz".

The meaning, according to Hayakawa, Language in thought and action is within us, and the word serves as a link to meaning. What will your words represent to the listener? Will your use of a professional term enhance your credibility and be more precise with a knowledgeable audience, or will you confuse them?


Key Takeaway

Language is a system of words used as symbols to convey ideas, and it has rules of syntax, semantics, and context. Words have meaning only when interpreted by the receiver of the message.


Exercises

  1. Using a dictionary that gives word origins, such as the American Heritage College Dictionary , Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary , or the New Oxford American Dictionary , find at least ten English words borrowed from other languages. Share your findings with your classmates.
  2. Visit several English-language Web sites from different countries - for example, Australia, Canada, and the United States. What differences in spelling and word usage do you find? Discuss your results with your classmates.
  3. From your viewpoint, how do you think thought influences the use of language? Write a one- to two-page explanation.
  4. What is meant by conditioned in this statement: "people in Western cultures do not realize the extent to which their racial attitudes have been conditioned since early childhood by the power of words to ennoble or condemn, augment or detract, glorify or demean?" Discuss your thoughts with a classmate.
  5. Translations gone wrong can teach us much about words and meaning. Can you think of a word or phrase that just doesn't sound right when it was translated from English into another language, or vice versa? Share it with the class and discuss what a better translation would be.