Grammar as a System of Values: Revisiting Saussure’s Abstract Entities
Saussure, F. de. Course in general linguistics Introduction Traditional grammar presents language as a system composed of identifiable categories: nouns, verbs, cases, and syntactic rules. Students encounter these elements as if they were stable objects that exist independently of the language in which they appear. Yet this familiar picture becomes less secure when examined through the perspective developed by Ferdinand de Saussure in the Course in General Linguistics. In several passages of that work, Saussure advances a striking proposal: grammatical categories do not exist as self-contained entities. They arise from relations within the linguistic system itself. Saussure’s broader theory of language begins with a principle that overturns common intuition. Linguistic elements are defined not by intrinsic substance but by the differences that distinguish them from one another. “In a language,” he writes, “what distinguishes a sign is what constitutes it” (Saussure, 1916/2011). Whe...