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Indo-European Roots. Amanda Fogarty. EN 307. A Brief History. 18 th century mercantilism and colonialism = introduction of Sanskrit to European scholars Similarities between Sanskrit and European languages proved the existence of a common language
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Indo-European Roots Amanda Fogarty EN 307
A Brief History... • 18th century mercantilism and colonialism = introduction of Sanskrit to European • scholars • Similarities between Sanskrit and European languages proved the existence of a • common language • Early 19th century scholars analyzed the languages’ similarities in attempts to • reconstruct the prehistoric language, now called Indo-European N -- Scandinavia Iceland, Ireland -- W E – India S – Greece, Italy
Dialects/Branches of Indo-European still represented today:
A Closer Look at English... • Most prevalent member of Indo-European family • Extensive borrowing from German and Romance neighbors, Latin, Greek, and • others • Loss of much of original Old English vocabulary • Due to borrowing from other Indo-European languages, English still contains over • 50% Indo-European roots • First 100 most frequent words in the English language are native Indo-European, • and 83 of the second 100
How Does Reconstruction Work? • Comparative method -- look at words in various related languages and find recurring • patterns to assist in finding the root word • Example: “daughter-in-law” • What is the Indo-European root?
snusos (f.) • Sn- • Sanskrit, Germanic, and Slavic show the common Indo-European sn- beginning • In other Latin, Greek, and Armenian words, initial Indo-European s was lost before -n; • we can assume this word follows suit • Regularity of sound correspondences • -u- • Sanskrit, Latin, Greek, and Armenian agree in using -u- • In other words, Slavic -u- corresponds to Sanskrit -u- and Old English -o- has undergone • a change from earlier -u- • -s- • Sanskrit -s- changes to -s- when preceded by -u- • Slavic -s- changes to -kh- after -u- • In Latin always and in some Germanic cases, intervocalic -s- changes to -r- • In Greek and Armenian, intervocalic -s- disappears • Ending • Sanskrit, Old English, and Slavic endings suggest feminine ending • Latin, Greek, and Armenian have irregular (and therefore inherited) feminine endings
Useful Terminology • Apocope: the deletion of a vowel at the end of a word • Ex: nama name • Grimm’s Law: Great Vowel Shift:
My Own Version of Reconstruction... Indo-European Present-Day English RootWord Albh Alp Alf ælf (OE) Elf apocope Grimm’s Law Great Vowel Shift deupaz (Germ.) deop (OE) Deep Grimm’s Law finthan (Germ.) findan (OE) Find Grimm’s Law, Great Vowel Shift Albho (“white”) Dheubh (“deep”) Pent (“to tread, go)