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BA English Language and Linguistics
About this course
English language and linguistics is the systematic study of language itself: how it is structured, how it works, how we acquire and use it, and what it reveals about human cognition, society and identity. Where literary study focuses on particular texts and their meanings, linguistics treats language as a system to be analysed and explained. It examines phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics alongside questions about language variation, change, social context and the ways language both reflects and shapes how we understand ourselves and each other. At York St John University you will study English language and linguistics over three years of full-time study, with a foundation year available for students who want additional preparation at the start. The programme explores how language is learned and used across different contexts, how it is structured at every level from sound to sentence to discourse, and how it conveys meaning both explicitly and implicitly. You will investigate social perceptions of language, examining how accent, dialect and register function as markers of identity and culture, and consider how language changes over time and varies across communities. A sandwich year and the opportunity for a year abroad add professional and intercultural dimensions to your studies, and work placement is integrated into the programme. The typical tariff of 104 makes the programme accessible to students with a genuine curiosity about language from a range of backgrounds. Graduates of English language and linguistics programmes work in education, speech and language therapy training pathways, publishing, communications, copywriting, human-computer interaction, language technology, journalism, policy and the civil service. The analytical skills developed through linguistic study, including the ability to examine evidence systematically and communicate complex ideas clearly, are valued across a wide range of graduate roles. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in linguistics, applied linguistics, speech pathology, language teaching or education, using their undergraduate knowledge as the foundation for specialist professional or research careers.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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