INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION: PSYCHOLINGUISTIC ASPECT
The article considers language as the organization of the speech of any person in any situation, without which it is impossible to characterize the internal structure of the speech stream. Language is exactly a system of guidelines necessary for the activity in the social world. Communication is pri...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Marina Sokolova Publishings
2016-09-01
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Series: | Russian Linguistic Bulletin |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://rulb.org/wp-content/uploads/wpem/pdf_compilations/3(7)/3(7).pdf#page=121 |
Summary: | The article considers language as the organization of the speech of any person in any situation, without which it is impossible to characterize the internal structure of the speech stream. Language is exactly a system of guidelines necessary for the activity in the social world. Communication is primarily nothing but as a way of making one or another correction in the image of the interlocutor’s world. In order for a language to serve as a means of communication, it must have a single or a similar understanding of reality behind it. Conversely, the unity of understanding the reality and the unity of coherence presuppose the possibility of adequate communication. A mandatory component of communication is the communicative act, that is, the act of sharing information between people. The speech, i.e. the natural sound language is an important means of conveying information that defines this aspect of the communication process as verbal communication. The idea of dialogue as the space, in which the exchange of information takes place, is defined as initial. Essentially, it is the dialogue that in this case acts as the backbone principle in dealing with problems of language. It is here that the essence of social and psychological transition to the analysis of communication is most visibly concentrated. An individual essentially "lives" in the world of Another person’s worlds, and studying the words of this person, he or she studies the "world" of Another person. Thus, the dialogue is not merely the interaction (verbal) with another person, but, ultimately, the interaction with the world of culture. |
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ISSN: | 2313-0288 2411-2968 |