Abstract

For the purposes of the present discussion, the term structure will be used in the following non-rigorous sense: A set of phonemes or a set of data is structured in respect to some feature, to the extent that we can form in terms of that feature some organized system of statements which describes the members of the set and their interrelations (at least up to some limit of complexity). In this sense, language can be structured in respect to various independent features. And whether it is structured (to more than a trivial extent) in respect to, say, regular historical change, social intercourse, meaning, or distribution - or to what extent it is structured in any of these respects - is a matter decidable by investigation. Here we will discuss how each language can be described in terms of a distributional structure, i.e. in terms of the occurrence of parts (ultimately sounds) relative to other parts, and how this description is complete without intrusion of other features such as history or meaning. It goes without saying that other studies of language - historical, psychological, etc.-are also possible, both in relation to distributional structure and independently of it.

Keywords

LinguisticsPhilosophy

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Year
1954
Type
article
Volume
10
Issue
2-3
Pages
146-162
Citations
4539
Access
Closed

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Zellig S. Harris (1954). Distributional Structure. WORD , 10 (2-3) , 146-162. https://doi.org/10.1080/00437956.1954.11659520

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DOI
10.1080/00437956.1954.11659520