@article{oai:bunkyo.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001041, author = {土屋, 澄男}, issue = {2}, journal = {文学部紀要, Bulletin of the Faculty of Language and Literature}, month = {1998-01-01, 2011-02-14}, note = {There are a number of people around me who claim that they are engaged in research in the field of 'applied linguistics'. Some of them are teachers who are engaged in the teaching of foreign languages; others are reseachers engaged in the pragmatic fields of linguistics, such as 'discourse analysis' or 'pragmatics'. It seems to me, however, that what the term 'applied linguistics' means is not always very clear. If the field were simply what the combination of the words 'applied' and 'linguistics' means, then the terminological problem would not arise. A mere semantic discussion on this field, therefore, would not be sufficient. In this article I will deal with the historical background of the term to show how it has been employed in concert with developments of theoretical linguistics in this century.}, pages = {34--42}, title = {応用言語学のみちすじ}, volume = {11}, year = {} }