Language Families
Language Families
Language Families
The names in Italics after the Arabic numerals indicate the language families,
the names in square brackets are those of the major languages of each group.
EUROPE AND ASIA MINOR 1) Indo-European (see below). 2) Finno-Ugric
which includes Arabic proper, Hebrew, Ethiopic and Aramaic, and Berber (in
the Atlas mountains), along with Cushitic, Egyptian (Coptic) and Chadic
(Hausa); it is the language family with the oldest linguistic records].
SUBSAHARAN AFRICA 1) Niger-Congo [a very large group, grouping into
Western Sudanic, with the branches Mande, West Atlantic, Gur and Kwa, and
Benue-Congo of which the main branch is Bantu with over 500 languages
stretching down to South Africa, includes Xhosa, Zulu and Kiswahili]. 2)
Nilo-Saharan [a diverse group stretching across the Sahara to Sudan].
SOUTH AFRICA 1) Khoisan [Bushman, Hottentot and other minor indigenous
languages of the South African peninsula, noted for the presence of clicks.].
SOUTH ASIA (Indian subcontinent, Pakistan) 1) Dravidian [Telugu, Tamil,
3.1
3.2
Centum languages
Satem languages
INDO-IRANIAN This consists of the languages in and around Iran and of those
groups who spread into north-west India and later throughout the whole country.
Hindi and Urdu (the latter a close relative in Pakistan) are the main languages of
the Indic branch whose classical form is Sanskrit.
ANATOLIAN An extinct group consisting in the main of Hittite, the language of
the Hittite Empire (1700-1200 BC). Tablets containing remains of this language
were discovered and identified in Turkey in the early twentieth century.
ARMENIAN A branch available from the ninth century AD in a Bible translation.
It has continued as East Armenian (in the republic of Armenia) and West
Armenian in Eastern Turkey.
TOKHARIAN Remnants of this language (an A and B version) were discovered
branch. Almost unbroken records are available covering over 2500 years. It
continues as modern Greek.
ALBANIAN Despite its small numbers, Albanian represents a separate branch of
the Indo-European family. First records are available from the 15th century.
ITALIC The term Italic is used for those dialects of ancient Italy which include
Latin but also Oscan and Umbrian (which strictly speaking form a separate
branch). It continues as the set of Romance languages.
CELTIC Once spoken over a wide area in central Europe, the Celtic languages
were pressed further west by rival Indo-European peoples which began to fill
central and western Europe (Germanic tribes and Romans). It continues as the
languages of the Celtic fringe of the British Isles and Breton in French Brittany.
GERMANIC This branch probably originated in southern Scandinavia and
spread out from there to cover the area of present-day Germany, the regions to
the south (Austria and Switzerland), the North Sea coast, England and the entire
Scandinavian peninsula along with the Faroes and Iceland.
BALTIC A branch of its own with three representatives Lithuanian, Lettish and
Old Prussian. The last language has been extinct since the 18th century.
Present-day Lithuanian is particularly archaic and of special interest to
Indo-Europeanists.
SLAVIC The oldest written form of Slavic is Old Church Slavonic. Nowadays
there are three main branches: 1) Southern Slavic [Slovene, Croatian, Serbian,
Macedonian, Bulgarian], 2) Western Slavic [Polish, Sorbian, Wendish, Czech,
Slovak] and 3) Eastern Slavic [Russian, White Russian, Ukrainian].
4 Writing systems
An alphabet is a system for representing sounds in writing. It is based on the
principle of sound-symbol equivalence, hence the letter c in Latin corresponded
to the sound /k/. This principle may be disturbed by later developments, e.g.
Latin /k/ later developed into /ts/ and then into /t$/ in Italian (before front
vowels). One symbol can also stand for more than one sound, again Latin c
remained /k/ before back vowels in Italian, similar to the principle in English:
call with /k-/, but cease with /s-/. But because of historical developments, not
all symbols stand for the same sounds. The letter a stands for /a/ in European
languages but for /ei/ in English due to a major vowel shift. The same is true of
consonants, for example, j stands for /dg/ in English but for /j/ in Swedish.
The term alphabet comes from alpha and beta, the first two letters of
the Greek alphabet. The letters of an alphabet may have their own names as with
Arabic or the Runic alphabet, an early Germanic system used in the first
centuries AD, e.g. p thorn, wynn (= joy). Alphabet systems tend to be
economical and can get by with about 30 symbols (26 letters in English, for
instance). The forms of letters may vary with no effect on their sound values, e.g.
letters may appear in italics or bold or UPPERCASE.
Orthography, from Greek orthos straight and graph I write, is the
spelling system of a language.
A different principle is found in languages which use characters (such
as Chinese). In these cases a symbol stands for an entire word or at least for a
syllable. Such languages have a very large number of symbols a few thousand
as in principle there is one per word, though by means of repetition and
combination the number required can be reduced. In character systems the art of
calligraphy, from kallos beauty and graph I write in Greek, is often
important, e.g. in China.
Alphabet systems are a development from older pictographic systems in which
stylised abstractions were used in writing, e.g. a circle for the sun, a vertical
stroke for a man, etc.
4.1
Features of alphabets
Not all alphabets have a one-to-one correspondence between sounds and letters.
Because of this two or more letters may be used to indicate a single sound. In
English sh indicates the voiceless sibilant [$]. The reverse is less usually the
case but can be seen in English with x which stands for [ks] and in German with
z which word-initially stands for [ts]. There may also be variation in writing due
4.2