Our BA Linguistics (including Foundation Year) could be suitable for you if your academic qualifications do not yet meet our entry requirements for a three-year version of our social sciences courses and you want a programme that improves your skills to support your academic performance.
What is BA Linguistics?
Linguistics explores how language works and what it means to “know a language”. You’ll investigate how age, gender, social background, and regional origins influence the way we communicate, how languages change over time, how children acquire language, and why languages differ across the world.
Why this course
Linguistics is an increasingly important subject with connections to psychology, philosophy, education, and artificial intelligence. Studying language helps us better understand ourselves, our societies, and the ways humans communicate.
The discipline has real-world applications in areas such as human rights, computer-assisted language learning, and the analysis of communication in professional settings, including healthcare, legal systems, and institutional interactions.
If you are interested in human communication, value a global outlook, and want a degree with practical relevance in a rapidly changing world, Linguistics at Essex provides an excellent foundation.
Who should apply
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Students curious about how language shapes human communication and society
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Learners interested in understanding language from scientific, social, and cultural perspectives
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Those considering careers in education, technology, communications, research, or public services
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Anyone who wants to explore both the structure of language and its role in everyday life
What you’ll learn
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Phonetics and phonology: Understand speech sounds and the sound systems of languages
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Morphology and syntax: Explore how words and sentences are structured
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Semantics and pragmatics: Examine how meaning is created and interpreted in different contexts
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Language variation and change: Investigate how language evolves across regions, communities, and generations
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Specialist topics: Study areas such as multilingualism, language and gender, language and the mind, and conversation and social interaction
Your learning experience
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Broad curriculum: Explore structural, applied, and experimental linguistics throughout your degree
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Flexible study options: Tailor your learning through a range of specialist modules
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Research-led teaching: Learn from academics in a department recognised for world-leading research impact
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Interdisciplinary perspective: Connect linguistics with psychology, philosophy, education, and artificial intelligence
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Global outlook: Examine language as a universal human ability while exploring diversity across cultures and communities
Careers and outcomes
A BA in Linguistics develops analytical, communication, and research skills that are highly valued across many sectors:
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Education and language teaching: Supporting language learning and literacy development
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Technology and artificial intelligence: Applying linguistic knowledge to language technologies and digital communication
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Research and analysis: Investigating language, behaviour, and communication across different contexts
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Media and communications: Understanding audiences, discourse, and effective communication strategies
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Public services and advocacy: Contributing to work in areas such as human rights, policy, and community engagement
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You'll graduate with a deeper understanding of human communication and the critical thinking skills needed to succeed in a wide range of professional environments.