

BA Linguistics
About this course
Linguistics is the scientific study of language, and what it reveals is surprising at almost every level. Languages differ from one another in extraordinary ways, yet they also share deep structural properties that point to something fundamental about human cognition. People acquire their first language effortlessly in childhood but struggle with second languages as adults, and understanding why requires theories of both learning and the mind. Every sentence you utter involves processes of extraordinary computational complexity that happen below conscious awareness. Linguistics investigates all of this with the methods of science, building theories, testing them against data, and revising them in light of evidence. At University College London, one of the world's leading centres for linguistic research, this three-year full-time programme gives you a rigorous grounding in the core subfields of the discipline. You will study phonetics and phonology, the sound systems of language; morphology and syntax, the structure of words and sentences; semantics and pragmatics, the study of meaning in and beyond utterance; and the social, historical, and cognitive dimensions of language. UCL's phonetics laboratory, its computational linguistics resources, and the research expertise of its academic staff make it an exceptional environment for this degree. You will develop strong analytical and methodological skills, learning to work with linguistic data, to build and evaluate formal and empirical models, and to communicate your findings in writing of high precision. The ability to think systematically about complex systems and to reason rigorously from evidence are capabilities that transfer widely beyond linguistics itself. Graduates in linguistics work in speech and language technology, natural language processing, and AI research at companies developing voice systems, translation tools, and language models. Speech and language therapy, language teaching, clinical linguistics, and educational assessment are other routes, some requiring further postgraduate training. Roles in publishing, journalism, lexicography, and communications also draw on linguistic training. Academic research at masters and doctoral level is a significant destination for those who want to contribute to the science of language.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 25 respondents (74% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
What comes next? 🎓
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai →
