Title: LIN 201
1LIN 201
- Fall 2007
- Lecture XXVII (27)
- Languages of the World I
2Note
- This week Esras Thursday Office Hour will be
moved to Friday, 200-300.
3Reminders
- Final Exam, Thurs., 12/13, 245-445 PM, Stolkin
Aud. - Review Session, Wed., 12/12, 500-700 PM (NOTE
THE TIME CHANGE), Room TBA. - Review Sheet available.
4Agenda
- 1. Regular sound correspondences.
- 2. The Romance Languages.
- 3. Some terminology.
- 4. Reconstruction of languages.
- 5. Videotape In Search of the First Language.
5Agenda
- 1. Regular sound correspondences.
6Regular sound correspondences (1)
- Northern US Southern US.
- pie pa
- high ha
- my ma
- Regular sound correspondence between the ie sound
in pie and the a sound in pa, etc.
7Regular sound correspondences (2)
- Regular sound correspondence explained
- Early Modern English (1600 AD).
- pie
- no change change
- N. US (2000 AD) S. US (2000 AD)
- pie pa
8Regular sound correspondences (3)
- r-ful r-less.
- farm fam
- farther fatha
- Regular sound correspondence between Vr in r-ful
dialects and V in r-less dialects.
9Review Regular sound correspondence (4)
- English of 1500
- farm
- no change change
- r-ful (2000) r-less (2000)
- farm fam
10Agenda
- 2. The Romance languages.
11The Romance languages (1)
- Mod Fr. Mod Ital., Sp.
- cher caro
- champ campo
- chandelle candela
- Regular sound correspondence between Mod Fr. ch
and Mod Ital. and Sp. c.
12The Romance languages (2)
13The Romance languages (3)
- Latin of 100 BC
- c
- change no change
- Mod Fr Mod Ital, Sp.
- ch c
14The Romance languages (4)
- Course Reader, p. 163. Find the regular sound
correspondences among the underlined sounds in
Modern Italian, Modern Spanish, and Modern French
for the words meaning to know, bank, shore,
she-goat.
15Romance lgs (5)
- Regular sound correspondence
- Italian Spanish French.
- p b v
16Romance languages (6)
- CR, p. 163 Other regular sound correspondences?
17Romance lgs (7)
- Regular sound correspondences
- Italian Spanish French.
- p b v
- t d --
- k g --
- d -- --
18The Romance languages and Latin
- 100 BC 2000 AD
- Latin Italian Spanish French.
- p p b
v - t t d --
- k k g --
- d d -- --
19Romance lgs A.D. 2000
20The Roman Empire and Latin -- A.D. 138
21Romance lgs (8) -- Dialect differentiation
(Stages)
- Stage I -- Latin is uniform all over the Roman
Empire (138 AD). - Stage II -- Communicative isolation among the
areas of Modern Spain, France, and Italy when the
Empire broke up (500 AD).
22Romance lgs (7) -- Dialect differentiation
(Stages)
- Stage III -- The changes from Latin p, t, and k
to b, d, and g occurred in what became the modern
Spanish-speaking areas and to v, --, -- in the
modern French-speaking areas, but there was no
such change in what became the modern
Italian-speaking area.
23Romance lgs (7) -- Dialect differentiation
(Stages)
- Stage IV -- Dialects of Latin continued to change
and became Italian, Spanish, and French --
different languages since they were no longer
mutually intelligible.
24Note -- General
- Differentiation of a uniform language into
dialects and then different languages is what
gives rise to regular sound correspondences of
the kind we found among Italian, Spanish, and
French.
25Agenda
26Ancestor language and descendant language (1)
- Language A is the ancestor of Language B if it is
the language from which language B developed.
(Ex Latin is the ancestor of French, Spanish,
and Italian Indo-European is the ancestor of
Latin.)
27Ancestor and descendant (2)
- If language A is the ancestor of language B, then
B is a descendant of A. (Ex French is a
descendant of Latin.)
28Review Genetically-related languages
- If two languages share an ancestor language, they
are genetically related. (Ex French and Spanish
share Latin Latin and English share
Indo-European all four are genetically related)
29Agenda
- 4. Reconstruction of languages.
30Comparative reconstruction
- The ancestor of two or more genetically-related
languages can be reconstructed using cognates.
31Terminology Cognate (1)
- (FR, p. 480) Cognates are words in
genetically- related languages that developed
from the same ancestral root,
32Terminology Cognate (2)
- Examples of cognates in the Romance languages
- Italian Spanish French.
- capra cabra chevre
- ripa riba rive
- sapere saber savoir
33Terminology Cognates (3)
- If words are similar in form and meaning across
two or more languages, then they may be cognates
and the languages may be genetically related.
There are two other possible explanations for
such similarities imitative words, borrowed
words.
34Word similarities across languages and how they
come about
- Likely cognates or not?
- English Spanish Wolof.
- father padre bay
- fish pescado jun
- tweet peep kweet
- radio radio radio
35Relatedness between languages
- If extensive meaning/form similarities (regular
sound correspondences) are found between words
across two languages that cannot be attributed to
borrowing or imitativeness, then they are
possible cognates and this is strong evidence
that the two languages are genetically-related.
36Borrowed or not? (1)
- Borrowed words Terms for inventions, culturally
unfamiliar objects and practices, etc. - Likely not to be borrowed pronouns (words that
translate I, you, etc.), terms for body parts
(head, foot, etc.), family relationships
(mother, father, etc.), objects in nature
(sky, fire, earth, etc.), etc.
37Borrowed or not? (2)
- Conclusion In determining genetic relationships
among languages, only similar forms across
languages for pronouns, names of body parts,
natural objects that are found everywhere, family
members, etc. (that is, likely cognates rather
than borrowings or imitative words), should be
considered.
38Agenda
- 5. Tape In Search of the First Language.
Questions, Course Reader, pp. 165-167.