Defining Language
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A framework showing how language is defined through spelling—letters distinguish every unit, anchoring words, sentences, and discourse in the alphabet.
Description
Defining Language reveals the architecture of meaning by showing how language is secured through spelling. At its foundation, letters distinguish one unit from another, separating “this” from “that” through the act of writing. Graphemes reference phonemes, phonemes reference morphemes, morphemes reference lexemes, and lexemes assemble into words. Words then form sentences, and sentences extend into discourse. At each level, definition depends on letters that spell.
This document demonstrates that spelling is not a secondary convention but the core mechanism of definition. Orthography stabilizes language; graphemes and glyphs provide distinction; logographs, numerals, and symbols remain interpretable only because they are anchored in alphabetic naming. The recursive system shows that every unit references another, but all return to letters as the ground of meaning. Defining Language is an essential resource for linguists, educators, AI researchers, and anyone seeking to understand how language defines itself through its elemental architecture.




