Studying Linguistics at HKU

Linguistics is an option for you--

  • if you enjoy learning languages and learning about languages or are fascinated with some aspect of language,
  • if you want to combine a scientific approach with an Arts or Social Science subject, or
  • if you are an Arts student with an analytic frame of mind.

Minors

A minor in Linguistics shall consist of 24 credit units of second and third-year courses from the Linguistics syllabus. As a pre-requisite, students must pass the first-year course LING1001 Introduction to linguistics.

To be accepted for our majors, students must have completed satisfactorily the first year course "Introduction to Linguistics". Other non-majors who wish to take Linguistics courses in their second and third years' studies will also be expected to have passed the first year course.

Majors

The following B.A. majors and programmes are offered in the department or in conjunction with other departments:

At the postgraduate level, the following programmes are offered in the department or in collaboration with other departments:

Resources

The primary library resources in Linguistics are housed in the University's Main Library. Books and journal titles can be looked up easily through the Library's computer catalogue system, Dragon, and articles may be searched for through on-line resources such as the MLA Bibliography, the LLBA (Language and Linguistic Behaviour Abstracts), and Linguistics Abstracts.

The Department has a small library of reference works and linguistics books. It has a well-equipped Phonetics laboratory for teaching and research in Experimental Phonetics. There is also a Laboratory for Research in Language Neuroscience and Cognition.

The Department's courses are enriched by seminar presentations by guest lecturers, members of staff, and postgraduate students in the department. Seminars are open to the public and all students are encouraged to attend.

Research

A variety of research projects are under way in the department, encompassing the fields of phonetics, speech recognition, phonology, morphology, syntax, lexicology and lexicography, language typology, language and literacy, sociolinguistics and conversation analysis, corpus linguistics, child language acquisition, pyscholinguistics, language and the human brain.

The department has established a particular concentration on linguistic studies of Asian languages. A strong tradition of research in Cantonese linguistics continues with new tools such as corpus linguistics and language processing being brought to bear on the field. Current research includes a Hong Kong Cantonese Corpus project, a project on Cantonese speech understanding in conjunction with IBM, studies of language development in Cantonese/English bilingual children and studies in the field of language and neuroscience. Other projects involve comparative studies of Cantonese in relation to Southeast Asian and African languages as well as English, and the grammar of Min dialects such as Chiu Chow.

Beyond the Asian focus, members of the department are conducting studies on Dagaare and Akan, spoken in Ghana, Ndebele, spoken in Zimbabwe, and European languages such as French, German, Norwegian, Icelandic and Russian, as well as Latin and Classical Greek.

The Department seeks to attract qualified postgraduate research students from Hong Kong, China and overseas with sufficient background in linguistics. Postgraduate studentships or research assistantships, research grants and international conference funding are available to support their research.


Enquiries

Enquiries should be addressed to Department of Linguistics, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong. Telephone: (852) 39178606; E-mail: linguist@hkucc.hku.hk

 
The Department of Linguistics, Rm 930, Run Run Shaw Tower, Centennial Campus, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong · 852-39178606