Language is closely linked to context in three ways: 1) Our ability to predict appropriate language depends on understanding context; 2) Understanding meaning requires understanding context; 3) Language constructs our view of the world differently depending on context. Context can be analyzed on two levels: genre (broader sociocultural context) and register (specific situational context defined by field, tenor, and mode). Language creates meaning through three metafunctions - ideational, interpersonal, and textual - that relate to these context levels. As a semiotic system, language constructs meaning through arbitrary associations between expressions and their contents within a particular context.
1. Language and context
Our ability to deduce context from text in our ability to predict what language will be
appropriate in a specific context provided evidence of the language/context relationship. For
example if you have to predict the structure, words and sentences you would find in a short
story for little children, you would not have difficulty. The same happens if you have to write
the story: you know which vocabulary you should use for a specific topic in a story for little
children.
The final evidence which shows the link between language and context is that we
cannot tell how people are using language if we do not take into account the context of use.
For example: with a sentence chosen at random from “the Happy Prince” being out of context,
at least part of its meaning is lost or unavailable:
“We must throw it away”
• It is not possible to determine:
-Who “we” refers to. What “it” refers to.
-What the relationship between interacts is.
-If it is an order or a suggestion.
Now we know that in asking functional questions about language we must focus not
just on language, but on language use in context. To describe the impact of context on text, it
is necessary to explore both what dimensions, and in what ways context influences language.
Therefore, context is divided into two levels:
Genre (Context of culture) Register (Context of situation)
The broad sociocultural environment, which The specific situations within the
includes ideology, social conventions and sociocultural environment. Systemic
institutions. Functional Language identifies three key
dimensions of the situation as having
significant and predictable impacts on
language use. These three dimensions, the
register variable of field (refers to what is to
be talked or written about), tenor (is the
relationship between the speaker and listener
or the writer and reader) and mode (refers to
the channel of communication.
With the influence of both contexts we see how language not just represents but
actively construct our view of the world. It enables us to make meanings with others and with
the world that make sense (not just words in isolation). Each text creates three meanings
simultaneously:
2. • Ideational metafunction: Divided into two: experimental and logical metafunction. The
experimental metafunction organises our experience and understanding of the world.
The logical metafunction works above the experiential. It organises our reasoning on
the basis of our experience. The ideational metafunction relates to the field aspect of
a text, or its subject matter and context of use. For example: This is the story of the
Happy Prince , a beautiful statue made of precious stones and gold that was not really
happy, because he could see how poor people in the city suffered.
• Interpersonal metafunction: it relates to a text’s aspect of tenor or interactivity. Tenor
comprises three component areas: the speaker/ writer person, social distance and
relative social status. For Example: The relationship between two main characters, the
Happy Prince and the Swallow is very close (they are good friends). The writer is trying
to transmit a message (the differences between the poor and the rich people) and to
teach us a lesson. (How important is to help people in need)
• Textual metafunction: it relates to mode; the internal organization and communicative
nature of a text. This comprises textual interactivity, spontaneity and communicative
distance. For example: It is a semi-formal written short-story; there are some
contracted forms and not very specific vocabulary. It uses direct speech and is
narrated in 3rd person omniscient.
Language accomplish this semantic complexity (making different meanings
simultaneously) because it functions as a semiotic system.
To construct a semiotic system, we need to observe that a determined meaning
(content) triggers a particular realization (expression) and the two together constitute a sign.
For example: in the story “ the Happy Prince”, the statue of the prince is made of gold and
precious stones and people in the city relates that fortune with happiness. There is no natural
link between the content happiness and the expression fortune but the relationship is
constructed in a particular context i.e. semiotic system.
In a semiotic system, signs are a fusion of a content (meaning) and an expression
(realization of that meaning). Semiotic systems are established by social convention and the
fusion between the two sides of the sign is arbitrary. Semiotic systems are arbitrary social
conventions by which it is conventionally agreed that a particular meaning will be realized by a
particular representation.
Language as a semiotic system
The most sophisticated and elaborated of all our semiotic systems is the system of
language. What gives language its privileged status is that other semiotic systems can
generally be translated into language. Language is a more complex semiotic system because it
involves sets of meaningful choices or oppositions. In language, we do not just have meaning
realized by words, for the words themselves are realized by sounds. This means that to
describe language we need three levels or strata.
Linguistic systems are also systems for making meanings so it makes meanings by
ordering the world for us in two ways. Firstly, they order content by convention.
3. The system thus orders the conceptual word according to culturally established
conventions about which dimensions of reality are meaningful. As we tend to see language as
a natural, naming advice, it becomes very difficult for us to think about dimensions of reality
other than those which are encoded for us in our linguistic systems. Reality is constructed
through the oppositions encoded in the semiotic systems of a language we use. It follows from
this relativistic interpretation that all language will order experience in the same way.
The second way in which linguistic signs order the world for us is by ordering
expression.
You will find that inventory of meaningful sounds will be different for each language.