Language and Culture Prof. R. Hickey ss 2006 The evolution of language


Diffusion Frauke Skrobaschewsky Moving outwards



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Evolution of Language

Diffusion

  • Frauke Skrobaschewsky

Moving outwards

  • roughly 75.000 years ago humans moved out of Africa and into Asia
  • first to Asia Minor
  • then westwards to Europe
  • eastwards to the Far East and Australia
  • the last continent to be populated was America
  • crossed from northeastern Siberia into northwest Alaska
  • went by boat via the Bering Strait
  • smalls groups
  • probably spoke dialects of the same language

The hunt for Universals

  • language universals = features which occur in all languages
  • any human can learn any language, so something must link all languages together
  • a possible list of “narrow“ absolute universals:

All languages

  • 1) have consonants and vowels
  • 2) combine sounds into larger units
  • 3) have nouns  words for people & objects
  • 4) have verbs  words for actions
  • 5) can combine words

All languages

  • 6) can say who did that to who
  • 7) can negate utterances
  • 8) can ask questions
  • 9) involve structure-dependance
  • 10) involve recursions
  • finding absolute linguistic universals is hard because they differ in details from language to language

Constraints

  • language must have constraints which prevent it from flying apart in different directions
  • constraints are hard to find  promising approach is the search for constraining links
  • language constructions are often linked tp one another in implicational chains
  • Noam Chomsky‘s ‘paramter setting‘  best known implicational theory
  • Chomsky‘s parameter setting
  • children have an inbuilt knowledge of some basic language principles
  • in addition they are instinctively aware of some key ‘either/or‘ options
  • they need to find out which options their own language selects
  • the extra information follows automatically

The future

  • there are about 6.000 languages spoken today
  • in this century 90% of all languages will cease to exist
  • 3.000 languages are ‘moribund‘: no longer learned as a first language by the new generation of speakers
  • the few languages that will remain will spread across the world

Sources

  • Aitchison, John. The seeds of speech – Language origin and evolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge: 1996.
  • http://www.ucl.ac.uk/alumni/get-involved/world-map/world-map.gif

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