Both
human and animals have language as a system of communication. Dogs bark, cats
mew. Dolphins, bees, and ants have probably the most sophisticated animal
communications. But human language possesses certain special qualities which
other animals do not have. These qualities of human language distinguish it
from the animal language. The first of
these qualities can be called 'duality'. This refers to the way in which a
stretch of speech can be cut up into units.
For example, a sentence such 'My mother is a very pious woman' may be
segmented into words: My/mother/is/a/very/pious/woman. These segments can be
split up into further units into sounds. For example, the word 'woman' can be
broken into the sounds: w/o/m/a/n. The same sounds can be used in the
construction of other words in English. The second quality is 'creativity'.
This quality enables a human being to make an infinite number of sentences, and
understand sentences which he has not heard before. The third quality is
'arbitrariness'. It means there is no direct connection between the sound or
form of any word and the object which it represents. For instance, to refer to
a tree, German has 'Baum'. English has 'tree', and French has 'arbre'. The
fourth quality is 'displacement'. It means that the language can be used —
sentences can be made and understood — at times and places where the context
referred to is not present. For example, the expression 'A glass of water' can
be understood even if the object itself is not present there at the time of
speaking. These are the four qualities which distinguish human language from
animal language.
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