

BA Linguistics And The English Language
About this course
Linguistics and the English language is a degree that turns the familiar tool of everyday communication into an object of systematic scientific inquiry. At Bangor University, the BA Linguistics and English Language is a three-year full-time programme that includes a foundation year, a sandwich year, a year abroad, and work placement, giving you a well-supported entry into the discipline and extensive experience beyond the classroom. Bangor has particular strengths in bilingualism and language acquisition research, reflecting its location in Wales, a genuinely bilingual society. The programme develops your understanding of how languages work as formal systems and as social phenomena. Phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics give you the tools to describe the structure of English and other languages with precision. Pragmatics examines how meaning is constructed in context, beyond what words literally say. Sociolinguistics investigates how language varies across social groups and geographical regions, how it changes over time, and how speakers use language to express identity and social relationships. Psycholinguistics asks how language is acquired, processed, and represented in the mind, with implications for education, language therapy, and understanding communication difficulties. The English language focus grounds this broader linguistic inquiry in one of the world's most widely used languages, with attention to its history, its varieties, and its role in global communication. Linguistics and English language graduates are well placed for a range of careers. Speech and language therapy is a natural direction for many, requiring postgraduate training but building on the phonological, syntactic, and psycholinguistic knowledge developed in the degree. Teaching English as a foreign language, natural language processing and computational linguistics, language policy, lexicography, publishing, and academic research are all other significant career paths. The analytical and research skills that linguistics develops are also valued in the civil service, journalism, communications, and any role that requires careful attention to how language shapes meaning and interaction. Some graduates go on to postgraduate study in linguistics, applied linguistics, or language-related disciplines.
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