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BA Modern Languages and English Language
About this course
Modern languages and English language is a combination that places linguistic study at its centre while approaching language itself from two complementary angles. Modern languages give you access to other linguistic systems and the cultures they carry, developing communicative competence and cultural understanding through intensive study of one or more living languages. English language study, in contrast, applies linguistic science to the language you may already speak natively, examining its structure, history, variation, and use in ways that reveal just how complex and fascinating the most familiar thing in your daily life actually is. Together, the two strands produce a genuinely distinctive graduate who combines practical language ability with a principled understanding of how language works. At the University of Essex, this four-year full-time programme gives you the depth that a long degree in languages requires. Essex has a strong tradition in both linguistics and modern languages, and the combination of these two research traditions gives the degree its particular character. You will develop real proficiency in your chosen modern language or languages, studying literature, culture, and contemporary usage alongside the language itself. The English language component will introduce you to phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and sociolinguistics, building a systematic understanding of linguistic structure and language in social use. Working across two linguistic frameworks develops a metalinguistic awareness, a sensitivity to how language is structured and how it means, that is genuinely useful whether you are working as a translator, a teacher, a linguist, or in any role that involves careful attention to communication. Research skills, close reading, and clear academic writing are also developed throughout. Graduates in modern languages and English language work in translation and interpreting, language teaching at home and abroad, publishing and editing, speech and language therapy, journalism, and the many sectors that value precise, multilingual communication. English language expertise is particularly sought in educational publishing, language assessment, and applied linguistic research. Postgraduate study in linguistics, applied linguistics, translation, or TESOL is a natural continuation for those who want to specialise, and doctoral research in any of these areas is accessible to strong graduates from this degree.
Syllabus & Modules
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