100% found this document useful (2 votes)
5K views12 pages

2 The Natural-Sound Source

1. Early theories proposed that primitive words imitated natural sounds like bird calls or emotional cries. 2. The 'yo-he-ho' theory suggested that early language developed from coordinated sounds used during group physical tasks. 3. The oral-gesture theory argued that language originated from gestures of the mouth and speech organs that mirrored full-body gestures.

Uploaded by

Alfadil Altahir
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
5K views12 pages

2 The Natural-Sound Source

1. Early theories proposed that primitive words imitated natural sounds like bird calls or emotional cries. 2. The 'yo-he-ho' theory suggested that early language developed from coordinated sounds used during group physical tasks. 3. The oral-gesture theory argued that language originated from gestures of the mouth and speech organs that mirrored full-body gestures.

Uploaded by

Alfadil Altahir
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 12

2-The natural-sound source

1- The ‘bow-wow’ theory:


*It is believed that primitive words could have been
imitations of the natural sounds which early men and
women heard around them.

*When a bird made a cuckoo sound, that natural


sound was adopted to refer to that object.
*all modern languages have some words with
pronunciations which seem to 'echo' naturally
occurring sounds.
* In English, in addition to cuckoo, we have
splash, bang, boom, rattle, buzz, hiss, screech
• a number of words in any language are
onomatopoeic (echoing natural sounds).
‫وشدق‬
‫دق‬ ‫رن‬ ‫تمتم‬
‫قهقهة‬ ‫غرغرة‬ ‫هدهدة‬
‫صهيل الخيل صليل السيوف صرير الباب او القلم‬
• but it is difficult to see how things without
sounds and abstract ideas could have been
referred to in a language that simply echoed
natural sounds.
• It is also difficult to accept the view that
assumes that a language is only a set of words
which are used as 'names‘ for things.
2-The “pooh-pooh” theory
1- This theory suggested that the original sounds of
language came from natural cries of emotions, such
as pain, fear, hunger, surprise, and the sounds of
laughter and crying, etc.
2-OUCH came to have its painful connotations.
• ah, oh, hey, wow, ay

3-Basically, the expressive noises people make in


emotional reactions contain sounds that are not
used in their language so it seems not to be the
source-sounds.
The social interaction source
the “yo-he-ho” theory

1- According to this theory the source of


language may be the sounds a person
involved in physical effort produce, especially
when that physical effort involved several
people and the interaction had to be
coordinated.

2- a group of early humans might develop a


set of sounds that were used when they were
lifting and carrying large bits of trees.
3- this theory highlights that human sounds
important use within the life and social
interaction of early human groups.
The oral-gesture source

• People use some nonverbal communication


when they speak. For example, we wave hands
to say good-bye; we nod our heads to show our
approval or to mean ‘yes’, we produce a sound
by our tongue when we mean ‘no’.

• The oral-gesture source suggests that language


started with the gestures that we use by our
mouth and other speech organs.
• physical gesture, involving the whole body,
could have been a means of indicating a wide
range of emotional states and intentions.

• many of our physical gestures, using body,


hands and face, are a means of nonverbal
communication stilt used by modern humans
• It is claimed that originally a group of physical
movements was developed as a means of
communication.
• Then a group of oral gestures, involving the
mouth, developed, in which the movements
of the tongue and lips were recognized
according to patterns of movement similar to
physical gestures.
• We can, indeed, use mime or specific gestures
for a variety of communicative purposes, but
it is hard to visualize the actual 'oral' aspect
which would mirror such gestures.
Glossogenetics
• Our ancestors became bipedal (standing and
walking on their two legs) about 3.5 million
years ago.
• When these humans could stand on their two
legs, their larynx (a speech organ behind
Adam’s apple in the human throat) changed in
a way to allow humans to produce vowel and
consonant sounds in human languages.
• Human language developed as a result of this
evolutionary change.

You might also like