linguo-, lingu-, lingua-, -linguist, -linguistic, -linguistical, -linguistically +

(Latin: literally tongue; and by extension, speech, language)

From Old Latin dingua which is a cognate (kindred) with Old English tunge, The change of d (in Old Latin dingua) to l (in Latin lingua) was probably due to dialectal influence (the so-called "Sabine l"). It was facilitated by a folk-etymological association with lingere, "to lick", the tongue having been conceived as "the licking organ".

—According to Dr. Ernest Klein in his
A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language


acutilingual
Sharp tongued.
alveololingual
In phonetics, used to describe a consonant that is sounded with the tongue touching or close to the ridge behind the teeth of the upper jaw.
ambilingualism
A reference to someone who has virtually equal command of two languages
audiolingual
Language learning approach or method as a matter of habit formation by repetitive drill, drill, and more drill.

Audiolingualism is based on behaviourism. Error correction is considered important to prevent bad habits; as well as, a structural syllabus is used in class. As a result grammatical structures are brought to the forefront sometimes with meaning being neglected.

Audiolingualism is largely discredited in some academic circles, although in some places it is still practiced.

Audiolingual learning started during World War II

The next "revolution" in terms of language teaching methodology coincided with World War II, when America became aware that it needed people to learn foreign languages very quickly as part of its overall military operations. The "Army Method" was suddenly developed to build communicative competence in translators through very intensive language courses focusing on aural/oral skills. This in combination with some new ideas about language learning coming from the disciplines of descriptive linguistics and behavioral psychology went on to become what is known as the Audiolingual Method (ALM).

This new method incorporated many of the features typical of the earlier Direct Method, but the disciplines mentioned above added the concepts of teaching "linguistic patterns" in combination with "habit-forming". This method was one of the first to have its roots "firmly grounded in linguistic and psychological theory" (Brown 1994:57), which apparently added to its credibility and probably had some influence in the popularity it enjoyed over a long period of time. It also had a major influence on the language teaching methods that were to follow, and can still be seen in major or minor manifestations of language teaching methodology even to this day.

The method gained popularity because it was considered successful

Another factor that accounted for the method's popularity was the "quick success" it achieved in leading learners towards communicative competence. Through extensive mimicry, memorization and "over-learning" of language patterns and forms, students and teachers were often able to see immediate results. This was both its strength and its failure in the long run, as critics began to point out that the method did not deliver in terms of producing long-term communicative ability.

Just as with the Direct Method that preceded it, the overall goal of the Audiolingual Method was to create communicative competence in learners; however, it was thought that the most effective way to do this was for students to "overlearn" the language being studied through extensive repetition and a variety of elaborate drills. The idea was to project the linguistic patterns of the language (based on the studies of structural linguists) into the minds of the learners in a way that made responses automatic and "habitual". To this end it was held that the language "habits" of the first language would constantly interfere, and the only way to overcome ths problem was to facilitate the learning of a new set of "habits" appropriate linguistically to the language being studied.

—Excerpts from Larsen-Freeman, Diane. (1986) Techniques and Principles of Language Teaching, Oxford University Press
"Grammar Pedagogy in Secondary and Foreign Language Teaching," (1991) TESOL Quarterly, Vol. 25, No. 3 Autumn.
bilingual
1. The ability to speak two languages easily and naturally.
2. Written, expressed, or conducted in two languages; such as, a bilingual dictionary.
3. Having or using two languages; such as, a bilingual nation.
bilingualism
1. The ability to speak two languages.
2. The habitual use of two languages colloquially.
bilingualist
A person who speaks two languages.
bilingually
1. A reference to the ability to speak two languages easily and naturally.
2. Characterized as that which is written, expressed, or conducted in two languages; such as, they speak bilingually (French and English) in Quebec, Canada.
bilingulate, bilingulated
Shaped like two tongues.
bilinguous
Bilingual.
biolinguistics
1. The study of the biological underpinnings of language; such as, the factors that enhance or retard language development and the neurophysiology of language disorders.
2. The study of language functions as related to or derived from biological characteristics of an organism.
brachiofaciolingual
Pertaining to or affecting the arm, face, and tongue.
brevilingual
Short sounds.
buccolingual
1. Of or relating to the check and the tongue.
2. In dentistry, referring to that aspect of the dental arch or those surfaces of the teeth in contact with the mucosa of the lip or cheek and the tongue.
3. Pertaining to the buccal (cheek) and lingual (tongue) surfaces of a posterior tooth.
buccolingually
From the cheek toward the tongue.

Cross references of word families related directly, or indirectly, to: "talk, speak, speech; words, language; tongue, etc.": cit-; clam-; dic-; English Words: Origins and Histories; fa-; -farious; glosso-; glotto-; lalo-; locu-; logo-; loqu-; mythico-; -ology; ora-; -phasia; -phemia; phon-; phras-; Quotes: Language,Part 1; Quotes: Language, Part 2; Quotes: Language, Part 3; serm-; tongue; voc-.


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