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Monash University

Linguistics - Faculty of Arts

Offered by the School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics

Linguistics is the study of the structure and function of language and the uses of language in communication, including written, spoken and cyber contexts. Linguistics explores how languages differ and what they all share, and provides the techniques and principles to be adopted in the analysis and description of any given language. In addition, the linguistic study of language and language use in socio-cultural contexts contributes to our understanding of identities, social and cultural organisation, multiculturalism and multilingualism, institutions and power, as well as the creative functions of language in texts and discourses. Knowledge of linguistics is central to the study of languages (e.g. English, Australian Aboriginal languages, Chinese, French, German, Greek, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Spanish). Linguistics also offers students of anthropology, mathematics, philosophy, sociology, engineering, psychology, law, and computer science, useful insights into the nature of language in their particular area of interest. Examples of the practical applications of linguistics include communications within organisations, communications interfaces with electronic systems, the preparation of materials for language teaching, the documentation of endangered languages, the development of language policies in government and education, and in the areas of business, professional and technical communication, tourism, intercultural communication and speech therapy

The school accepts suitably qualified candidates for research degrees in linguistics (PhD and MA). Monash staff in the Linguistics Program have expertise in a number of areas of linguistics, including anthropological linguistics; applied linguistics; Australian Aboriginal languages; Australian English; Austronesian languages; bilingualism and multilingualism; child language acquisition; cognitive linguistics; comparative and contrastive linguistics; computers in linguistic research; conversational analysis; cross-cultural communication; dialectology; discourse analysis; functional grammar; historical linguistics; language and discrimination; language description and documentation; language attitudes; language attrition; language contact; language ecology; language maintenance and shift; language planning and policy; language typology; literacy development; morphology and morphosyntax; new and other Englishes; phonetics (acoustic and articulatory); phonology; politeness phenomena; pragmatics; prosody and meaning; second language acquisition; semantics; sociolinguistics; syntax.

In addition, there is close collaboration with linguists in other programs within the School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics who may have skills not represented within the Linguistics Program. Co-supervision can be arranged where it will be beneficial to a postgraduate student.

For further information on the PhD and research masters in linguistics visit http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/linguistics/pgrad/index.php

Relevant course groups

  • Graduate Certificate
  • Graduate Diploma
  • Postgraduate Diploma
  • Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • Masters degree by coursework
  • Masters degree by research and coursework
  • Masters degree by research
  • Doctor of Philosophy

Contacts

Telephone: +61 3 9905 5409; Email: sally.riley@arts.monash.edu.au