Historical linguistics The birth, evolution, and death of languages
Rank Language Population (in millions) % of world’s pop. 1 Chinese (Mandarin) 885 15 2 English 322 5.4 3 Spanish 266 4.5 4 Bengali 189 3.2 5 Hindi 182 3.0 6 Portuguese 170 2.8 7 Russian 170 2.8 8 Japanese 125 2.1 9 German 98 1.6 10 Chinese (Wu) 77 1.3 11 Javanese 76 1.2 12 Korean 75 1.2 13 French 72 1.2 14 Vietnamese 67 1.1 15 Telegu 66 1.1
Polygenesis vs. monogenesis Monogenesis prevails in biological evolution Polygenesis prevails in cultural evolution: independent invention Polygenesis seems to prevail in remote language origins
Causes of language change Random Drift Phonetic Assimilation Language contact: Borrowing Interference in acquisition of second language Institutionalization of formerly aberrant forms.
Change in animal systems? Little evidence that call systems of other primates evolve through time Data about the past are skimpy. Linked to genes. Genetic evolution slower than cultural evolution Whales: the possible exception
Language families No evidence for one common ancestor language But languages can be grouped into families The role of Sanskrit in the discovery of the Indo-European family
Indo-European family Probably originated in north-central Europe Associated with “Aryan” warriors who were to conquer Europe, India, and parts of Asia No literary remains No archeological site can be firmly linked. Has been hypothetically reconstructed
Branches of Indo-European Italic: Latin and Romance languages Slavic: Russian, Polish etc/ Celtic: Irish, Gallic, Welsh, Breton Germanic: German, English, Swedish, et.al. Indo-Iranian: Hindi, Bengali, Farsi, Pashto
Map of Celtic Languages Today
European language distribution, present
Indo-European Expansion
Indo-European languages in times past
Indo-European languages around the world
Language Families in Europe
Indo-European branches in Europe today