Syntax {Ans: The system of rules governing permissible word order in sentences}Phonology {Ans: The rule system within a language by which phonemes can be sequenced, combined, and pronounced to make words}Example of Pragmatics {Ans: To one person I say, "That is my seat!" To another, I say, "Excuse me, my ticket has that seat number."}Example of Discourse {Ans: Discourse includes paragraph structure, cohesive ties, and genre conventions such as story structure.}Semantics {Ans: The study of word and phrase meanings and relationships}Example of Phonology {Ans: No English word begins with the sound /ng/; the sound /p/ and /k/ are never adjacent in the same syllable.}Example of Semantics {Ans: The word rank has multiple meanings. The words order and sequence have similar meanings.}Orthography {Ans: A writing system for representing language and the rules that govern it}Example of Morphology {Ans: Nat- is a root. Nature is a non=in; natural is an adjective; naturalist is a noun; naturally is an adverb.}Example of Syntax {Ans: "Our district recruits new teachers" is a sentence; " New teachers our district recruits" is not a sentence.}Morphology {Ans: The study of meaningful units in a language and how