Structural layers
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Livelli strutturali | - | -
Article
In general linguistics, a structural layer is an endolinguistic subsystem that possesses minimal structural elements and combinatory mechanisms. The structural layers are:
- phonology - as opposed to the non-endolinguistic field of phonetics. The minimal element is the presemiotic phoneme, which is the abstract psychic image of a sound and carries emic oppositive value within a language;
- morphology. The minimal element is the morpheme, which is the minimal linguistic sign and carries a meaning aribitrarily associated to a form;
- syntax. The minimal element is a phrase (but phrases can also consist of smaller phrases combined with each other based on the rules of Universal and language-specific grammars).
Other layers that are frequently mentioned are the layer of the lexicon (that, however, lacks some formal features such as the existence of minimal elements and a close set of combinatory rules) and semantics (which, however, if defined as the general realm of meaning, exists before language encoding and is, therefore, not properly endolinguistic).