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Hard Words

The document discusses the debate around tracing the origins and evolution of human languages. Linguists have differing views on classifying languages into families and relating them to ancient roots. It is possible that all modern languages descended from a single common language spoken by early humans in Africa, though there are challenges in reaching a consensus due to limited evidence and different methodological approaches taken by researchers.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
715 views4 pages

Hard Words

The document discusses the debate around tracing the origins and evolution of human languages. Linguists have differing views on classifying languages into families and relating them to ancient roots. It is possible that all modern languages descended from a single common language spoken by early humans in Africa, though there are challenges in reaching a consensus due to limited evidence and different methodological approaches taken by researchers.

Uploaded by

Ana Iulia
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Hard Words

(Review)
(April, 1991) by Philip E. Ross (Scientific American) , staff writer

What's in a word? f it's ti!, the answer is contro"ersy. #in$%ists are at each other's throats o"er attempts to trace lan$%a$e to ancient roots. Some radicals belie"e that they can discern echoes of words not spo!en for millennia and that it is possible to relate all lan$%a$es to a sin$le ton$%e spo!en by the first h%mans. &onser"ati"es thin! the radicals bar! %p the wron$ tree. What is indeed %ni'%e abo%t this article is the fact that lan$%a$e is bein$ traced from the be$innin$ of times. (or me, it ma!es sense that all the lan$%a$es of the world m%st ha"e spran$ from a common one and the )Eve Hypothesis*

form%lated by Allan &. Wilson, +ar! Stone!in$ and Rebecca #. &ann co%ld in fact ma!e %s %nderstand that if the entire h%man pop%lation was traced %p to a sin$le woman in Africa (perhaps ,-.,... years a$o) why wo%ldn/t the monogenesis of language be fo%nd0 1he most interestin$ and intri$%in$ fact is that lan$%a$e researchers were %nable to come to an a$reement abo%t the roots of lan$%a$es. 1his raises a '%estion, beca%se Eric P. Hamp, Aaron B. Dolgopolsky and Joseph H. Greenberg ha"e different ways of approachin$ this s%b2ect, either reconstr%ctin$ the history of the ndo3E%ropean lan$%a$es, either proposin$ the Nostratic superfamily, or $ro%pin$ whole families of lan$%a$es. n other words, it was "ery hard and painsta!in$ to search for a simple answer at a simple '%estion4 hat is the root of language! thin! that the ca%se wo%ld be the fact that lin$%ists had their own way of attac!in$ this iss%e. 5%t it wasn/t the same always. We m%st a$ree that the lin$%ists are ri$ht in this partic%lar case4 the fact that from the ndo3E%ropean lan$%a$es there were some similarities between its modern lan$%a$es. We m%st than! "ir illiam Jones, Dane #asmus #ask, $ran% Bopp and Jacob Grimm to their wor! and their points of "iew. 1hey seem to find commonalities between En$lish, 6erman, #atin and Sans!rit referrin$ to the letters f and v that are s%bstit%ted in other $ro%ps by p. An e7ample wo%ld be father and vater in En$lish and 6erman, pater in #atin and pitar in Sans!rit. 1his shows %s that the mono$enesis of lan$%a$e is a "ery powerf%l and tr%e idea, beca%se these soun& shifts are fo%nd in many other lan$%a$es. 1he a%thor wrote on this s%b2ect rather than on some other s%b2ect beca%se of its %nicity, comple7ity and beca%se it is in o%r interest to !now the roots of the lan$%a$e, to reali8e the fact that 9ostratic hypothesis may be $en%ine. wo%ld indisp%table recommend this article to others beca%se the wor! of the So"iet lin$%ists :ladisla" +. llych3S"itych and Aaron 5. ;ol$opols!y demonstrated that a hypothetical ancestor called 9ostratic came across from the lin!in$ of si7 families of lan$%a$es. What is asto%ndin$ is the fact that these families transmit the c%lt%ral herita$e of three '%arters of h%man!ind< Also the method of chartin$ lan$%a$e families as branches on a tree belon$s to A%$%st Schleicher (mid3,=th cent%ry) and another research of lin$%ists >contained in findin$ the co$nates of two different lan$%a$es.

t is tr%e indeed that the !inship, bo%nd of lan$%a$es is related to their history and not to its content beca%se it is "ery well !nown that the past of a lan$%a$e is what defines it. 1he most widespread $ro%p of lan$%a$es today is the ndo3E%ropean, spo!en by half the world's pop%lation. 1his entire $ro%p, ran$in$ from ?indi and Persian to 9orwe$ian and En$lish is belie"ed to descend from the lan$%a$e of a tribe of nomads roamin$ the plains of eastern E%rope and western Asia. 6am!redli8e and "ano" , two American lin$%ists, do%bted abo%t the )homeland* . t is belie"ed that the protolan$%a$e ori$inates from here and the readers may a$ree with this beca%se of some words that apparently were borrowed from the )non3 ndo3E%ropean lan$%a$es of +esopotamia specifically eastern Anatolia (now part of 1%r!ey) and the so%thern &a%cas%s*. 1he landscape described by the protolan$%a$e as now resol"ed m%st lie somewhere in the crescent that c%r"es aro%nd the so%thern shores of the 5lac! Sea, so%th from the 5al!an penins%la, east across ancient Anatolia (today the non3E%ropean territories of 1%r!ey) and north to the &a%cas%s +o%ntains. ?ere the a$ric%lt%ral re"ol%tion created the food s%rpl%s that impelled the ndo3E%ropeans to fo%nd "illa$es and city3states from which, abo%t @,... years a$o, they be$an their mi$rations o"er the E%rasian continent and into history. #in$%ists tra"el a lon$ path in pro"in$ their 9ostratic hypothesis, b%t they are "ery confident in their reconstr%ctions. 1hat is beca%se they can ma!e predictions that can be tested positi"ely a$ainst empirical e"idence. 1homas #. +ar!ey made a "ery h%moro%s b%t also compellin$ state referrin$ to the fact that if a lan$%a$e had only fi"e li"in$ spea!ers left , lin$%ists wo%ldnAt be seen as r%shin$ aro%nd with an amb%lance and a tape recorder. t is a "ery tr%e state beca%se there arenAt eno%$h lin$%ists and f%ndin$. What is "ery pitif%l is the fact that ,,half of the 'orl&(s )*+++ e,isting languages 'ill &ie out in the ne,t century. No even is sure ho' many there might have been. ) n my opinion, the !ey3words that can help the reader in dechiperin$ this article are ,,-itochon&rial Eve* , ,,Amerin& theory* , ,,language families an& superfamilies*, ,,linguistic an& genetic trees*, ,,linguistic research*, ,,monogenesis hypothesis* , ,, Nostratic hypothesis* , ,,origin of language* , ,,the homelan& of the .n&o/European languages0 . 1uestions2

,. Why was 6reenber$As article ,,#an$%a$e in the Americas* , on the classification of the myriad lan$%a$es , %nder attac!? B. Why it is considered that if 9ostratic was spo!en at a time ,,when the do$ was 2%st bein$ domesticated then it wo%ld be perfectly reasonable*? C. Why didnAt the laryn$eal consonants s%r"i"e in any !nown ton$%e? D. Why does Eric P. ?amp consider the alternation between k and 3 %nacceptable in k45na6345na (do$ and wolf)?

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