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WORLD GEOGRAPHY Oct. 24, 2014
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Today Unit 5 – Language (continued)
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Unit 5 - Language - Languages and the role they play in culture - Language distribution - Diffusion of language - Language and places
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Language and culture - Language contains much of cultural identity: “Visibility” Place of origin Names of people, places, and things Arts (e.g. music, literature) PERCEPTION (to a degree, at least)
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Language and culture Example: Place names in the U.S. vs. China U.S. - often indicative of the ethnic groups that originally settled in the area e.g. San Francisco (Spanish) Williamsburg (German) China (Mandarin) – Often determined by geographic location
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What constitutes a language? - Mutual intelligibility - Standardized languages - Dialects
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Mutual Intelligibility Criterion for a language: Speakers can understand each other Problems - Measuring “mutual intelligibility” - Standard languages and government impact on what is a “language” and what is a “dialect”
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Mutual Intelligibility Criterion for a language: Speakers can understand each other Problems - Measuring “mutual intelligibility” e.g. Mandarin Chinese vs. Cantonese Chinese vs. Standard written Chinese - more than 8 dialects of Chinese
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Mutual Intelligibility Criterion for a language: Speakers can understand each other Problems - Standard languages and government impact on what is a “language” and what is a “dialect”
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Dialect Variant of standard language by ethnicity or region: - Vocabulary - Syntax - Cadence, pace - Pronunciation Scottish dialect: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5XyecKONu8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5XyecKONu8 BRP: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIv0_LVT6JQ&list=PL6F 15F2789687007F http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIv0_LVT6JQ&list=PL6F 15F2789687007F
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Dialect Creates the question of what the “true” language is. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qXGuCaApR7U http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qXGuCaApR7U
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Dialect Isogloss: A geographic boundary within which a particular linguistic feature occurs
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Dialect
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Standardized language “One that is published, widely distributed, and purposefully taught.” (p. 172) e.g. Beijing Mandarin BRP (British Received Pronunciation) Parisian French Korean spoken in Seoul - Essentially, decided through power
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Language distribution - Language formation - Historical languages (Proto-Indo European) Languages of Europe and Africa (next class)
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Language distribution
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Language formation Linkages among languages marked by sound shifts, slight changes in a word across languages over time “Milk” = lacte in Latin leche in Spanish lait in French latta in Italian “I’m hungry” = J'ai faim (French) Ho fame (Italian) Tengo hambre (Spanish) http://ielanguages.com/romance_phrases.html http://ielanguages.com/romance_phrases.html
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Language formation Language divergence: Breakup of a language into dialects and then new languages from lack of interaction among speakers e.g. Latin Romance languages - French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian
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Language formation Language convergence: When peoples with different languages have consistent interaction and their languages blend into one e.g. Old English + Norman French = Middle English (which eventually developed into modern English) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYsD4DPg4ls
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Study of historical languages Backward reconstruction: Tracking sound shifts and the hardening of consonants backward to reveal an “original” language Can deduce the vocabulary of an extinct language Can recreate ancient languages (deep reconstruction) Proto-Indo European: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo- European_vocabularyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo- European_vocabulary http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jlcV7DYL3o#t=532
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Historical linkages among languages Indo-European language family Proto-Indo-European language Nostratic Language (ancient ancestor of Proto-Indo-European Language)
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Origins of Proto-Indo European Renfrew Hypothesis: Began in the Fertile Crescent, and then: - Europe’s languages from Anatolia - North Africa and Arabia’s languages from the Western Arc of Fertile Crescent - Southwest Asia and South Asia’s languages from the Eastern Arc of Fertile Crescent
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Agriculture Theory With increased food supply and population, migration of speakers from the hearth of Indo- European languages into Europe
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Dispersal Hypothesis From the hearth eastward into present-day Iran Around the Caspian Into Europe
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Proto-Indo European translator http://indo-european.info/dictionary-translator/
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