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Language Change. Ma. Fernanda Herrera Liza Guerra Negrete. Language Change. Diachronic Approach The Linguist Study related to language and it’s development over time. e.g. Historical Linguistics which study language change. Language Change. Synchronic Approach
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Language Change Ma. Fernanda Herrera Liza Guerra Negrete
Language Change • Diachronic Approach The Linguist Study related to language and it’s development over time. e.g. Historical Linguistics which study language change.
Language Change • Synchronic Approach The Linguistic Study related to language which analyze language in a particular period of time. e.g. The analysis of the lexis during de 1930 in English
Types of Changing • Incremental Change Is the creation of new vocabulary used to designate some physical invention, new social motivation or new items of knowledge. e.g. Before the discovery of the new world, the word America did not exist in Europe.
Types of Changing • Decremental Change words that are not used anymore since the object is not longer used. e.g. Words related to falconry and archery are not commonly use nowadays.
Types of Changing • Replacement change Is the replacement of words or structures, but both ways actually co exist in the language used. e.g. ‘rooves’ as the plural of ‘roof’ in place of standard English ‘roofs’.
Language Change Dialect • What is Dialect? • Dialect as a barrier of communication • “related language”
Language Change The differences between two dialects of a same language could be: • External or sociolinguistic political and socioeconomic boundaries that creates those differences • Internal or linguistic physiological aspect of the speakers created dialect differences
Examples of external and internal changes from Old English to Modern English Phonological Changes 1st The change from [k] to [č] afterthefrontvowel [I]in thesoutherndialect of oldEnglish. 2nd The loss of k before consonants that produced the variants [i:] and [Ik] in the northern dialect. 3rd The replacement of [Ik] by [I:] in the nothern dialect 4th The change in the pronunciation from [i:] to [aj] in the transitional period
Language Change… “All Languages show considerable linguistic variation at any given point in time” Constant and unavoidable
Language is unique and innate in humans. How this capacity have originated and evolved?
Speculations • Bow How Theory: Humans begin to mimic sounds of nature • Vocal Language Theory: Language evolved from spontaneous cries of emotions • Gestural Language Theory: Language evolved from a system of hand gestures and signals. • Human Brain Theory: The evolution of human language is closely related with the development of human brain. • Thesis • “Early parent”
The Reconstruction of an “Earlier Parent” Similarities among languages Sir William Jones Sanskrit Proto Indo European Language (India and Europe) How do Linguists establish historical relationships among Languages in order to learn about their early forms?
EXERCISE… Compare these three Languages What do they have in common? • All are numerals • A & C have some phonetics similarities • Six out of ten words begin with the same consonant • Only 1 & 8 begin with vowel • Most of the words in A & C have the same number of syllables English Navajo Sanskrit
Genetic Relationships • Pay attention to the following: If there are similarities among Languages it could be due to three reasons. • Chance overlap in sound & meaning: similarities in sound structure and in word for common objects such as water, numbers, etc. • Borrowing: Incorporation of words from another language. Mainly about religion, government, culture, technology and cuisine. • True historical relationship: using the comparative method, you can establish a true genetic relationship. A group of words in each language that share phonemes, phonological rules, common words and related meanings.
The Indo European Language Family • All Languages are related • A group of Languages that have a true historical relationship. • Proto Language • Series of changes over time Do you know how many languages are spoken around the world? • Between 4 & 5 thousand • Between 7 & 8 thousand • More than 9 thousand The correct answer is A. Half of the world’s population speaks Indo European languages
Changes: Causes and Mechanism • There are two ways to see Language change • Individual change: an spontaneous change in a language on the part of a single speaker. E. g Grammar simplification • Community change: the transmission and sharing of changes among speakers in a linguistic community. E.g lexis, morphology, syntax or phonetics. Are these type of changes making languages decay or improve?
English Language: Changes • Old English period 5th to 11th century • Middle English period 11th to 15th century • Modern English 15th century up today
Examplesof these changes • Lexical change • Addition: new words have been incorporated from other languages. E.g. French, Latin, Greek. • Phonological change • Applicability: in old English fricatives became voiced when they occurred between voiced sounds. Not longer present. • Morphological change • Addition: the “able” rule for suffixes have created new words. E.g. doable, washable. • Syntactic change • Loss: adjective agreement is not longer a rule in modern English.
Pictographic Idiographic
Logographic Cuneiform
Syllabic Writing System Hieroglyphics