Title: Historical Linguistics: Change, reconstruction
1Historical LinguisticsChange, reconstruction
2Overview
- Reconstruction
- Time-depth
- Conversative vs. innovative languages
- Reconstruction and prehistory
- More historical change
- Morphological, morphosyntactic
- Semantic
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3Time-depth
- Persian is an old language.
- All (modern) daughters of proto-language have
equal time-depth.
4Time-depth
- Proto-Indo-European 5000-6000 years ago
- Proto-Germanic 2500-3500
- Oldest IE written documents
- Hittite 1300 B.C.
- Sanskrit 1200 B.C.
- Greek 1000 B.C. (Mycenean earlier)
5Reconstruction
- The comparative method
- assemble cognates
- deduce proto-form, meaning
- Reconstructible
- Not necessarily attested in all branches
- eg?w- drink
- Hittite
- Latin ebrius drunk
6A cognate set
- Sanskrit snu?a
daughter-in-law - Old English snoru
daughter-in-law - Old Church Slavonic snuxa daughter-in-law
- Latin nurus
daughter-in-law - Greek nuós
daughter-in-law - Armenian nu bride,
daughter-in-law - Albanian nuse bride
7Reconstruction
- sn or n? daughter-in-law
- Latin nix, niv- snow
- English snow
- PIE sneig?w- to snow
- vs.
- Latin ne- not
- Old English ne not
- PIE ne not
- u, OCS u, OE o lt u
- Medial s? ?? r?
- Sanskrit s gt ? / u__
- Latin s gt r/ V__V, ? Germanic
- Greek, Armenian s gt 0 / V__V
- (ending, accent)
- PIE snusos
- daughter-in-law or bride?
- most early IE societies patriarchal and
patrilocal - daughter-in-law in most bride restricted
8Conservative vs. innovative
- Sanskrit snu?a lt snusos
- conserves sn, u accent
- innovates s gt ? / u__
- Albanian nuse bride
- conserves u, medial s
- innovates s gt 0 / __n, semantics
9Reconstruction and prehistory
- Calvert Watkins the lexicon of a language
remains the single most effective way of
approaching and understanding the culture of its
speakersThe reconstruction of vocabulary can
offer a fuller, more interesting view of the
culture of a prehistoric people than archaeology
precisely because it includes nonmaterial
culture.
10Proto-Indo-European
- med?u- mead, honey
- daiwer- husbands brother
- wifes relatives
- sneig?w- snow
- laks- salmon (lox)
- mori- body of water lake (?), sea (?)
(mermaid) - gr?-no grain (gt corn)
- owi- sheep (gt ewe)
- dem?- house, household
- dem(?)- to build (gt timber)
- kwel- to revolve, go around, kw(e)-kwl-o-
wheel
11Historical linguistics
- 1786 Sir William Jones observed similarities
between Sanskrit, Ancient Greek, Latin, Gothic,
Celtic, Old Persian - 19th century reconstruction of PIE
- 20th century on
- Hittite, Tocharian
- Comparative method applicable elsewhere
12Major branches of Athabaskan family
38 daughter languages
13Language change
- Languages may change on various levels
- phonetics, phonology
- morphology
- syntax
- semantics
14Morphemes disappear
- PA Deg
Xinag Witsuwiten Tsekene - mans daughter -tshe? -t?h??
-tsh?? -- - arm -q??ne? -qon
-- -kònè?
15Paradigm leveling
- Elimination of irregularity among morphologically
related forms
16Babine-Carrier Babine-Carrier Witsuwiten Witsuwiten
progressive future progressive future
1sS i-s- th-i-s- i-s- th-?-s-
2sS ?-n- th-?-n- i-n- th-?-n-
3sS i- th-i- i- th-?-
Leveled progressive paradigm (uniformly
i) Leveled future paradigm (uniformly ?)
17Semantic change
Reduction (hyponym formation)
- Proto-Athabaskan Tsekene
- -??m snore, growl -hxõh snore
- Witsuwiten
- -nt??c dance -ntec (white
people) dance
18Extension
Hypernym formation
- Proto-Athabaskan Tsekene
- ci?ce blueberry ???e berry
19Where was Proto-Athabaskan spoken?
- Michael Krauss
- the PA homeland (Urheimat) was in eastern
Alaska, interior, perhaps extending into Canada
already.
20Considerations
- Deep vs. shallow differentiation
- Location of related languages
- Reconstructed vocabulary
21Differentiation
- Deep differentiation long occupation of
territory - Alaska, western BC
- Closely related recent spread
- Mackenzie R.
- Pacific Coast
- Apachean
22Na-Dene family
23Related languages
- Usually nearby
- Eyak
- mouth of Copper R.
- Tlingit
- Alaska panhandle
24Reconstructed vocabulary
- Mountains and snow
- ts?? mountain
- ?aç snowshoe
- ?u ice, icicle, glacier
1910 map
Hudson Bay Mt., B.C.
25Summary
- All languages change over time
- Change occurs at all levels of grammar
- Earlier stages can often be reconstructed, with
implications for prehistory
26Question
- Bronze Age 3300-1200 BC (bronze lt coppertin)
- PIE ajes- copper or bronze (attested in Latin,
Greek, Sanskrit) - Iron Age (1300 BC on) (iron, steel)
- isarno iron only attested in Germanic, Celtic
- Are ajes and isarno relevant to dating of PIE?
(PIE estimated 5000-6000 BC.)