Title: Subgrouping, Wave Theory, Language Contact, Areal Linguistics
1Commentary on Crowley, Ch. 8-13
- Subgrouping, Wave Theory, Language Contact, Areal
Linguistics
2Subgrouping
- Shanes presentation raised a number of practical
questions such as - Which dialect is the most conservative and which
is the most innovating? - According to Shanes lexico-statistical analysis,
Matu-Daro retains the most cognates, Kanowit the
least. (I have suggested that he re-do his
percentages based on just the first 200 words of
our list, to avoid the problem of artificial gaps
in the Kanowit data.)
3Innovations imply out-migration
- What does Shanes classification imply with
respect to the movement of the Melanau people?
Did they start in Kanowit and migrate to the
coast? Or did they come in from the coast and
migrate to Kanowit? - According to two articles by Blust (1991) and
Ross (1991), conservative dialects typically
represent stay-at-homes, whereas innovating
dialects imply populations on the move.
4Why should this be?
- Ross (1991) offers a sociological explanation
relating to the correction behavior of
migrating vs. sedentary adults. - The innovators are the children acquiring the
language.
5Correction behavior of adults
- To the extent that the children are corrected,
innovation is curtailed to the extent they are
not corrected, innovations develop rapidly. - According to Ross (1991), migrating populations
are less concerned about the niceties of
pronunciation and grammar than are sedentary
populations.
6Preliminary Method of Subgrouping
- Lexicostatistical analysis is useful as a
preliminary tool in subgrouping. - Remember our results obtained after only an hour
or so of such analysis and reported in Homework
1. - Based on the first 200 words of our list, we
discovered that the pair Matu-Daro, Belawai
shared the highest number of cognates next were
M-D, Dalat and last were Dalat, Kanowit.
7Advanced Method of Subgrouping
- Lexicostatistical methods seek to establish
subgroups by counting words/cognates. - The Comparative Method achieves the same goal by
counting shared innovations (rules, including
sound changes,and morphological (analogical)
changes). - Where the results differ, you can have an
argument about which method represents the
truth. - For 99 out of 100 linguists, the answer is
clear the Comparative Method is the only
reliable approach. -
8Although I agree with the 99, I do not share the
attitude of some library-bound linguists that
lexicostatistical analysis has no value.
- Therefore, I find it interesting when the
results of the two methods converge, and I am
also interested in knowing why in case the
results differ.
9So what about Melanau?
- Null hypothesis all four dialects are sisters.
- Last resort The null hypothes is maintained
until the evidence forces a better one. - Disinterestedness A scientist shouldn't be
invested in the outcome. Hypotheses are not
good or bad but only supportable or
unsupportable based on the evidence.
10So what about Melanau?
- To look for a subgrouping hypothesis, we need to
count not just cognates, but also (and
especially) rules. - Any two rules shared by any two dialects is
POTENTIALLY a shared innovation. (Remember this
term.) - In the Comparative Method, a subgroup is defined
over the number and quality of shared
innovations. - For example, one group of German dialects share
the First Consonant Shift (Grimms Law), e.g.
PIE pgtf) and the High German Second Consonant
Shift, e.g. PGmc pgtpf).
11Great Vowel Shift 10 or more sound changes
-
- English dialects show evidence of the GVS. A
language closely related to English that failed
to undergo the Great Vowel Shift is barred from
membership in the same lower order subgroup.
Such a language is Frisian. - Of course, English and Frisian do belong in a
higher-order subgroup that also includes Dutch. -
12No end in sight
- Subgrouping goes on and on. PIE has three
primary branches representing first-order
subgroups Anatolian, Hellenic, and
Indo-Iranian. Each of these has three or more
branches and each of these has more and more
branches, all the way down to hundreds of
individual languages.
13PAn and PMP
- Proto-Austronesian has nine primary branches,
all representing languages currently spoken on
the island of Taiwan. - One of the nine, Proto-East Formosan, is the
mother of Proto-Malayo-Polynesian. - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austronesian_language
sStructure
14(No Transcript)
15Tree theory vs. Wave theory, p. 249
- An interesting conumdrum exists at the heart of
the field of Historical and Comparative
Linguistics. - There exist two perfectly valid theories of the
way languages change and people move. - One is called the tree theory and/or theory of
divergence, and it has served as the basis of
this course. - Its not unlike the decision to teach
articulatory phonetics. There exists another
approach (acoustic phonetics), but it would be
confusing to teach both at the same time.
16Early European Migrations
17http//books.google.com/books?idyfZZX1qjpvkCpgP
A72lpgPA72dqproto-indo-europeanwavetheoryso
urceblotsdNLHiyRafFsig5N7qAR_g3yaX2XxZrKepYCK
2wO4hleneiTBC1Sb6RBOHAtgeWtszqDAsaXoibook_
resultresnum1ctresultPPA73,M1
18Branches imply a tree waves imply a pond (or a
flat map)
- Tree theory assumes that people move and
languages change without looking back. Here
today, gone tomorrow. It follows that languages
will keep branching as they lose contact with
their ancestral roots. Tree theory works best
over ever larger tracts of time. PIE and PAn go
back 6,000 years. Thats plenty of time for
languages to diverge in tree-like fashion. - But dialectologists have long known its not like
that on the ground. Changes actually begin in
one location and spread to the next location,
like ripples on a pond.
19Wave theory
- Moreover, speech communities are not monads they
interact with other communities. Its the same
with rules (changes). - Often many changes (rules) will spread from one
language to another within an area. Crowley
mentions the spread of uvular ? in Europe (p.
260) and the Rhenish Fan (p. 247) as examples. - Accordingly, linguistics has developed a
sub-field called areal linguistics.
20ISOGLOSS
- A principal tool of Wave Theory is the isogloss.
- The term is derived from the Greek and means
same word. - An isogloss is a lineoften in the form of a
closed circle like a ripple on a pondshowing the
spread of a new word or a sound change over a
linguistic area. - A bundle of isoglosses defines a dialect area.
21Isoglosses vs. shared innovations
- One term is tree-theoretical, the other is
wave-theoretical. - Both are used to define dialect groupings.
- Both are statistics-bound in the sense that
dialect groupings depend on convergence of
significant numbers of valid comparisons. - For example, in wave theory dialect boundaries
are defined in terms of bundles of isoglosses.
22Wave-like change across languages
- A famous example concerns retroflection in the
languages of India. There are at least 14 major
language groups in India nearly all of them have
retroflex alveolar stops. For most of these
languages, retroflection is irregulari.e. does
not follow from the respective protolanguages.
Probably it was borrowed in ancient times,
probably from Sanskrit, and spread across the
map.
23Wave-like changes
- Another example is the change q gt h/__ in Malay
and scores of other languages in Southeast Asia. - This word-final h corresponding to PMP q is
irregular in many of the languages, although it
is regular in Malay and Javanese. - Malay and Javanese were the prestige languages
and power centers during the reign of the
Sriwijaya Empire (7th-13th century). It is
necessary to assume that the RULE was borrowed by
scores of languages, which accounts for the
unexpected appearance of word-final h in
languages scattered all over the map.
24Rejang irregular -h
- In Rejang, there are three dialects in contact
with Malay, and two dialects insulated
geographically from such contact. - Two of those in contact with Malay have
developed word-final h reflecting PMP -q the
other three reflect PMP final -q as glottal
stop. - The irregularity arises when one considers the
structure of Proto-Rejang. The Proto-Rejang
reflex was clearly glottal stop (simplicity,
Uniformitarianism, etc.). So how did two
dialects develop h? There is no evidence of ?
gt h except word-finally in the two dialects in
contact with Malay. And in one of the
dialectsRawasthis h is the only allophone
(Rawas lacks word-initial and intervocalic /h/).
25 Wave theory to the rescue
- A convenient conclusion is that Rawas and
Kebanagung dialects borrowed -h from Malay as a
consequence of intermarriage with Malay speakers. - Bilingualism and the prestige of the loaner
language are two material causes of most
borrowing, which in turn has an effect on the
children. (Always the children are the primary
agents of change.)
26What to do about a conundrum?
- Given that we have two theoriestree theory and
wave theorywhich one is correct?
27Duh! They are both correct!
- One works best over long stretches of time and
among languages that have lost contact with one
another. - The other works best on the ground over short
stretches of time, and among languages (and
dialects) in constant contact with one another.
28When are both relevant?
- Theoretically, both are always relevant all the
time. But its confusing to mix them
indiscriminately. - In practical terms, when problems arise within a
tree-theoretical analysis, a solution can
sometimes be found by adopting a wave-theory
approach. - This is especially true when dealing with
closely-related dialects, such as Melanauand
especially Matu and Daro (which are taken to be a
single dialect) and Matu-Daro and Belawai. The
closer the dialects are geographically, the more
likely they are to borrow not just words, but
rules.
29Areal Linguistics, p. 261
- Moreover, rules may be borrowed across a wide
area from a language, such as Malay, which is (or
was once) held in high regard. - Such was likely the case with the Rejang final -h
in two of five dialects, and which upset the neat
tree-theoretical applecart. Wave theory came to
the rescue to explain the odd -h. - Just as borrowed words can be set aside when
establishing proto-languages within
tree-theoretical assumptions, so borrowed rules
can and must be set aside, i.e. dealt with
separately.
30Substrate theory, p. 270
- A linguistic substrate refers to indigenous
languages that may have become extinct as the
result of contact with, and colonialization by, a
superior culture. - Substrate languages often leave traces in the
form of vocabulary items and even rules. - For example, the NYC bowery dis and dat may be
remnants from a Dutch substrate (NYC lt New
Amsterdam). - Psycholinguistic test Name five American rivers.
31Again, we set aside substrate influences. Why?
- Because reconstruction is tree-theoretical
borrowing patterns have their place in
wave-theory approaches. - A proto-language belongs to the theory of
divergence. Remember the second part Barriers
reduce the density of intercommunication. - By contrast, when people move next door to a
robust community speaking a different language,
both languages may change in part because of the
contact. Comparative reconstruction breaks down.
Wave theory rules here.
32Does tree-theory apply to Melanau?
- Clearly the answer is yes. The dialects are far
enough apart linguistically (and geographically)
to warrant applying the Comparative Method.
33Can our four dialects be sub-grouped?
- That remains to be seen.
- Its no loss if they cant be we just want the
facts. - Two tree-theoretical possibilities remain on the
table. - All four dialects are sisters WXYZ (null
hypothesis) - Two or three can be subgrouped W XYZ or
WXYZ.
34Back to the question of possible shared
innovations
- Take the rule -k gt -? in Dalat and Kanowit.
- Is this a shared innovation?
- Remember I said Any two rules shared by any two
dialects is POTENTIALLY a shared innovation. - Just looking at -k gt -? in isolation, it is
impossible to tell whether it is a shared
innovation.
35Candidates for shared innovation status problems
and solutions
- Part of the problem with-k gt -? is that it is a
common (natural) change that might have occurred
independently in each dialect. - Moreover, the same change has affected Malay.
- What is needed is more evidence that the two
dialects in question indeed form a subgroup.
36Shared innovation is a technical term.
- In order to count as a shared innovation, a rule
must be established to have arisen within a
common subgroup. - No single rule can have such statuswith one
possible exception (see below). What is needed
is a goodly number of identical rules converging
on a set of dialects.
37Strong and weak evidence
- Some candidates for shared innovations have more
weight than others as evidence for subgrouping.
- Shared uncommon rules (such as Dalat agti) have
more weight than shared common ones (such as
-kgt?). - Weirdness has its uses in Historical Phonology.
38More research needed!
- The way to strengthen a weak subgrouping argument
is to find support in the form of other
candidates. - Are there any other candidates?
- I wish I knew!
- Thats what we have graduate students for!
39Once Over Lightly
- The last slide lists a set of topics I found
interesting when reading the last five chapters
of Crowley. - Please refer to the Study Guide for a couple of
possible test questions designed to help focus
your reading.
40Once Over Lightly
- Neogrammarian Hypothesis, p. 226
- Cultural Reconstruction, Chapter 13
- Blusts attempt to reconstruct iron for PMP,
p. 316 - Age-area Hypothesis, p. 305
- Paleo-linguistics, p. 308
41Commentary on Ch. 8-12