1 / 28

Human Geography By James Rubenstein

Human Geography By James Rubenstein. Chapter 5 Key Issue 3 Where Are Other Language Families Distributed?. About 50% of all people in the World speak a language in the Indo European Family. About 20% of the World speak a language in the Sino-Tibetan family.

Download Presentation

Human Geography By James Rubenstein

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Human GeographyBy James Rubenstein • Chapter 5 • Key Issue 3 • Where Are Other Language Families Distributed? S. Mathews

  2. S. Mathews

  3. About 50% of all people in the World speak a language in the Indo European Family. • About 20% of the World speak a language in the Sino-Tibetan family S. Mathews

  4. 20% Speak one of these four language families. • Afro-Asiatic (Middle East) • Austronesian (Southeast Asia) • Niger-Congo (Africa) • Dravidian (India) S. Mathews

  5. S. Mathews

  6. Language Family Tree • Divided into language families, branches, and groups. • Families form trunks. • Individual languages form leaves. • Branches with less then 5 million speakers and dialects are not shown. S. Mathews

  7. S. Mathews

  8. Sino-Tibetan Family • Spoken in China and several Southeast Asian countries. • Sinitic Branch • Austro-Thai Branch • Tibetan-Burman Branch S. Mathews

  9. Chinese • Mandarin (Pu tong bua – common speech) is the most important. - Spoken by 3/4ths all Chinese. - Official language of People’s Republic of China and Taiwan. • Others; Wu, Cantonese, Min, Xiang, Hakka, Jinyu, and Gan. S. Mathews

  10. Sinitic Structure • Based on 420 one-syllable words with multiple meanings. • Meanings must be inferred from context and tone. • The written form relies on ideograms. S. Mathews

  11. Ideograms • Characteristics that represent ideas or concepts, not specific pronunciations. S. Mathews

  12. Ideogram Examples: Key characters may be built into more complex words. S. Mathews

  13. Japanese • A distinctive language family. • As an island, developed language in isolation. • Written language of Ideograms (from china) • Foreign terms are written with on of two systems of phonetic symbols. S. Mathews

  14. Korean • Often classified as a separate language family. • Written with phonetic characters (referred to as Hankul). • Over half of Korean words are derived from Chinese. S. Mathews

  15. Austro-Thai and Tibeto-Burman Branches • The Thai branch is spoken in Laos, Thailand and parts of Viet Nam. • The Burman branch is spoken in Myanmar (formerly Burma) S. Mathews

  16. Vietnamese • Most spoken tongue of Austro-Asiatic language family. • Written with Roman alphabet, which was devised by 7th century Roman Catholic missionaries. S. Mathews

  17. Afro-Asiatic Language Family • Includes Arabic and Hebrew. • Spoken in North Africa and Southwest Asia. • 4th largest language family. • Languages used to write holiest books of 3 major religions. S. Mathews

  18. Altaic and Uralic Language Families Once thought to be of the same family. S. Mathews

  19. Altaic Languages • Spoken in a 5000 mile band between Turkey and Mongolia. • Turkey is the most widely used example. • Originally written with Arabic letters, switched to Roman letters in 1928. • Include Azerbaijani, Mongolian, and Usbek among others. S. Mathews

  20. Uralic Languages • Estonians, Finish, and Hungarians are among the speakers. • Common root first spoken in the Ural Mountains 7000 years ago, north of the Kurgan homeland. S. Mathews

  21. African Language Families • Nearly 1000 distinct languages and several thousand dialects have been documented. • Result of 5000 years of minimal interaction. • Most lack written tradition. • North African language patterns are relatively clear, but sub-Saharan are more complex. S. Mathews

  22. S. Mathews

  23. Niger-Congo Language Family • More than 95% of sub-Sahara speak languages of this family. • Benue-Congo is the most important branch, which includes Swahili. • Swahili is official language of Tanzania, was originally a mixture of Arabic and African languages. S. Mathews

  24. Nilo-Saharan Language Family • Spoken by a few million people in north-central Africa. • Divided into six branches, each of which are divided into several groups. • Total number of speakers in each group is extremely small. S. Mathews

  25. Khoisan Language Family • Concentrated in the southwest. • Distinctive use of clicking sounds. • Hottentot is most important Khoisan language. S. Mathews

  26. Austronesian Language Family • Once known as the Malay-Polynesian family. • Malay-Indonesian is spoken in Indonesia and is most frequently used example of this family. • Malagasy is spoken in Madascar, which is 1900 miles from other languages of the same family. S. Mathews

  27. Nigeria’s Language Conflict • More than 200 distinct languages. • English is the official language, but only 2% of the people speak it. • Speakers of one language are unlikely to understand any others of the same language. S. Mathews

  28. S. Mathews

More Related