Learn Linguistics with any AI
The science of language
Linguistics is the scientific study of language itself — not any one language, but the hidden system beneath all of them: how sounds, words and sentences are built, what meaning is, how children acquire language, and how it all changes over time. It takes something you do effortlessly every day and shows it to be one of the deepest puzzles there is.
And it has never been more relevant. Large language models are, quite literally, models of language — so the questions this field has asked for a century are suddenly everyone's. Set your level below.
Compose your prompt
Choose a prompt and a level, then copyA map of Linguistics
The system beneath every languageThe field studies language at every level, from a single sound to a whole society.
- Phonetics & phonology — the sounds of speech, and how each language organises them.
- Morphology — how words are built from smaller meaningful parts.
- Syntax — the rules that assemble words into sentences.
- Semantics & pragmatics — literal meaning, and meaning in context.
- Historical & comparative linguistics — how languages change, and how they are related (the great language families).
- Sociolinguistics — language and society: dialect, accent, register, and change in progress.
- Psycholinguistics & acquisition — how the brain processes language, and how children learn it so fast.
- Computational linguistics & NLP — language and machines, the field beneath every language model.
The canon
The people who mapped languageReal figures across two and a half thousand years.
- Pāṇini (c. 5th century BCE) — his Sanskrit grammar, the Aṣṭādhyāyī, is a formal system of astonishing rigour, millennia ahead of its time.
- Ferdinand de Saussure — the Course in General Linguistics (1916), which founded modern structural linguistics and the study of the sign.
- Roman Jakobson — a giant of phonology and of the functions of language.
- Edward Sapir & Benjamin Lee Whorf — the idea, still argued over, that the language you speak shapes the way you think.
- Noam Chomsky — Syntactic Structures (1957) and universal grammar, the most influential and most contested theory in the field.
- William Labov — founded modern sociolinguistics by studying how language really varies and changes in living communities.
- Joseph Greenberg — mapped the universals and the typology of the world's languages.
- The International Phonetic Alphabet — the shared system for writing down every sound in every human language.
The live debates
Where linguists disagreeReal, unresolved arguments — several of them sharpened by AI.
- Is grammar innate? Chomsky's universal grammar and a built-in "language faculty," against usage-based views in which language is learned from experience and statistics — the field's central divide, and language models have thrown fresh fuel on it.
- Does language shape thought? The Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, from a strong version now rejected to subtler effects that genuinely hold up.
- Describe, or prescribe? Linguistics studies how people do speak, not how they "should" — which is why almost every popular "grammar rule" turns out to be about social power.
- Do language models understand language? Whether systems that predict the next word reveal anything real about human language, or nothing at all — the newest and liveliest question here.
- How did language begin? One of the hardest problems in all of science, with almost no direct evidence to go on.
Where to start
A route inA route in — everything runs from the panel above.
- Run Orientation on "what linguistics actually is," or on how a single sentence is built.
- Take one level — the sounds (phonetics) or the structure (syntax) — into the Socratic tutor.
- Use Great Debates on universal grammar versus usage-based learning, and ask what today's language models imply for it.
- Connect to Modern Languages and English, and to Computer Science for the NLP side.
Start noticing your own speech: the effortless system you can't consciously state is exactly what this field sets out to uncover.