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Historical linguistics

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Historical linguistics & the history of language Origins Lexical, social, and cognitive theories Mutability Dialectal differences Stages of English – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Historical linguistics


1
Historical linguistics the history of language
  • Origins
  • Lexical, social, and cognitive theories
  • Mutability
  • Dialectal differences
  • Stages of English
  • Symbolic shifts
  • Linguistic study
  • Reconstruction
  • Language families

Homo sapien 1
You are here
2
Bow-wow theory
  • Language arose from onomatopoeia
  • Making noises to represent elements in the
    environment animals, rain, expulsive gas,

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
3
Bow-wow theory
  • Language arose from onomatopoeia (iconic)
  • Making noises to represent elements in the
    environment animals, rain, expulsive gas,

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
4
Pooh-pooh theory(AKA the ouch theory)
  • Language arose from spontaneous emotional noises
  • Sighs, moans, cries, ejections of surprise, fear,
    delight,

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
5
Pooh-pooh theory(AKA the ouch theory)
  • Language arose from spontaneous emotional noises
    (indexical)
  • Sighs, moans, cries, ejections of surprise, fear,
    delight,

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
6
Bow-wow pooh-pooh theories
  • Lexical theories
  • Nothing about syntax
  • Nothing about phonology, morphology,
  • Not mutually exclusive

7
Yadda, yadda, yadda
that language evolved among humans to replace
social grooming because the grooming time
required by our large groups made impossible
demands on our time. Language, I argue, evolved
to fill the gap because it allows us to use the
time we have available for social interaction
more efficiently.
?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
8
Yo-he-ho theory
  • Language arose in muscular and rhythmic efforts
    accompanying group work
  • Gathering, distributing, distance-pursuit of
    prey,

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
9
Yo-he-ho theory
  • Language arose in muscular and rhythmic efforts
    accompanying group work (indexical)
  • Gathering, distributing, distance-pursuit of
    prey,

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
10
Hmmmmm theory
a prelinguistic musical mode of thought and
action
  • Communicative system
  • Holistic
  • Rhetorical
  • Multimodal
  • Rhythmic (indexical)
  • Melodic
  • Mimetic (iconic)

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
11
Throwing madonna theory
  • Nursing (left-side)
  • Motor/linguistic sequencing
  • Structural
  • Non-lexical
  • Piggy-backing theory

?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
12
Piggybacking traits (exaptation)
  • Bone
  • Gills
  • Feathers
  • Penguin wings
  • Speech!

13
Neuron packing theory
To be, or not to be. That is the question.
The origin of language may have to do with
certain physical laws relating to neuron packing
or regulatory mechanisms.
?
Homo sapien 1
You are here
14
Language origins sub-total
  • Bow-wow and pooh-pooh
  • Lexical
  • Social
  • Throwing Madonna, Neuron-packing
  • Non-lexical (syntactic)
  • Cognitive
  • Yadda-yadda-yadda
  • Non-lexical
  • Social
  • Ye-ho-ha, Hmmmmm
  • Non-lexical
  • Cognitive-Social

NotMutuallyExclusive
15
Early modern English
  • I am no orator, as Brutus is
  • But, as you know me all, a plain blunt man,
  • That love my friend and that they know full well
  • That gave me public leave to speak of him
  • For I have neither wit, nor words, nor worth,
  • Action, nor utterance, nor the power of speech,
  • To stir men's blood
  • Julius Caesar, c1599

Homo sapien 1
You are here
16
Middle English
  • Whan that Aprill, with his shoures soote
  • The droghte of March hath perced to the roote
  • And bathed every veyne in swich licour,
  • Of which vertu engendred is the flour
  • yadda, yadda, yadda
  • Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages
  • The Canterbury Tales, c1380

London
Homo sapien 1
You are here
17
Middle English (Northumberland)
Regiolects! geographically-based group speech
differences
  • Si en e sege and e assaut watz sesed at Troye,
  • e bor brittened and brent to bronde and askez,
  • e tulk at e trammes of tresoun er wrot
  • Watz tried for his tricherie, e trewest on erthe
  • The Green Knight, c1380

Sociolects! class-based groupspeech differences
Ethnolects! tribal-based groupspeech
differences
Homo sapien 1
You are here
18
Language variation
!
19
Language variation
Different persons growing up in the same language
are like different bushes trimmed and trained to
take the shape of identical elephants. The
anatomical details of twigs and branches will
fulfill the elephantine form differently from
bush to bush, but the overall outward results are
alike.
Idiolects!
W.V.O. Quine
20
Old English
  • Nu sculon herigean heofonrices weard,
  • meotodes meahte, and his modgeanc,
  • weorc wuldorfæder, swa he wundra gehwæs,
  • ece drihten, or onstealde.
  • Caedmons hymn, c670

Homo sapien 1
You are here
21
1066
22
Modern English
  • Substratum (under-level)
  • Germanic (Angles, Saxons, Jutes, etc.)king, law,
    deer, cow, cock, piss,
  • Superstratum (over-level)
  • Latinate (Norman French)monarch, justice,
    venison, beef, penis, urinate,

23
Language change
24
MutabilityLanguage change
  • Internal
  • (isolation, fashion, prestige, )
  • External
  • (trade, war, imperialism, )

Phonological Morphological Lexical Syntactic Seman
tic
25
Semantic change (hyponym / hypernym swap)
  • dog
  • poodle hound spaniel
  • Toy, French, Grey, Blood, Springer,
    Cocker,

hypernym
hyponym
hypernym
hyponym
26
Semantic change (hyponym / hypernym swap)
  • Modern English
  • dog
  • poodle hound spaniel
  • Toy, French, Grey, Blood, Springer,
    Cocker,

27
Phonological change
Middle English
Modern English
  • night
  • knight
  • knee
  • name
  • cough

nIFt knIFt knij nQm kAF
nAit nAit nij nejm kAf
28
Morphological change
Present Past
Singular first drÿge drÿgde
second drÿgst drÿgdes
third drÿgþ drÿgde
Plural Plural drÿgaþ drÿgdon

Infinitive, drÿgan Infinitive, drÿgan Infinitive, drÿgan Infinitive, drÿgan
Past participle, gedrÿged Past participle, gedrÿged Past participle, gedrÿged Past participle, gedrÿged
Present participle, drÿgende Present participle, drÿgende Present participle, drÿgende Present participle, drÿgende
29
Morphological change
Present Past
Singular first drÿge drÿgde
second drÿgst drÿgdes
third drÿgþ drÿgde
Plural Plural drÿgaþ drÿgdon

Infinitive, drÿgan Infinitive, drÿgan Infinitive, drÿgan Infinitive, drÿgan
Past participle, gedrÿged Past participle, gedrÿged Past participle, gedrÿged Past participle, gedrÿged
Present participle, drÿgende Present participle, drÿgende Present participle, drÿgende Present participle, drÿgende
30
Morphological change
Present Past
Singular first dry dried
second dry dried
third dries dried
Plural Plural dry dried

Infinitive, to dry Infinitive, to dry Infinitive, to dry Infinitive, to dry
Past participle, (has) dried Past participle, (has) dried Past participle, (has) dried Past participle, (has) dried
Present participle, (is) drying Present participle, (is) drying Present participle, (is) drying Present participle, (is) drying
31
Morphological change
Present Past
Singular first dry? dried
second dry? dried
third dries dried
Plural Plural dry? dried

Infinitive, to dry Infinitive, to dry Infinitive, to dry Infinitive, to dry
Past participle, (has) dried Past participle, (has) dried Past participle, (has) dried Past participle, (has) dried
Present participle, (is) drying Present participle, (is) drying Present participle, (is) drying Present participle, (is) drying
32
Lexical changes
  • Mayhaps
  • Hark
  • Cad
  • Elden
  • Burdalane
  • Sweltersome
  • Clyte

Pork Sandwich Tofu Interface Robot Radar F-bomb
33
Syntactic change
Good even, Casca brought you Caesar home?
Good evening, Casca did you bring Caesar home?
34
Mutability
  • History of English
  • Periods
  • Events
  • Pressures to change
  • Internal/external
  • Regio-, socio-, ethno-lects
  • Types of change
  • Semantic (e.g., dog/hound)
  • Phonological (e.g., cough)
  • Morphological (e.g. levelling)
  • Lexical (words come, words go)
  • Syntactic (Yes/no question formation)
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