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Historical linguistics

Historical linguistics. Mutability Dialectal differences Stages of English Symbolic shifts Linguistic study Reconstruction Language families Origins Lexical, social, and cognitive theories. Homo sapien # 1. You are here. History of English. Aetalects!

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Historical linguistics

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  1. Historical linguistics • Mutability • Dialectal differences • Stages of English • Symbolic shifts • Linguistic study • Reconstruction • Language families • Origins • Lexical, social, and cognitive theories Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  2. History of English Aetalects! [age-based groupspeech differences] far out … outasite … groovy… rilly [really] … sweet … sick … dude … cool … hip … keen … neat … swell Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  3. Early modern English • I am no orator, as Brutus is; • But, as you know me all, a plain blunt man, • That love my friend; and that they know full well • That gave me public leave to speak of him: • For I have neither wit, nor words, nor worth, • Action, nor utterance, nor the power of speech, • To stir men's blood • Julius Caesar, c1599 Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  4. Middle English • Whan that Aprill, with his shoures soote • The droghte of March hath perced to the roote • And bathed every veyne in swich licour, • Of which vertu engendred is the flour; • yadda, yadda, yadda • Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages • The Canterbury Tales, c1380 London Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  5. Middle English (Northumberland) Regiolects! [geographically-based group speech differences] • Si† en †e sege and †e assaut watz sesed at Troye, • †e bor° brittened and brent to bronde and askez, • †e tulk †at †e trammes of tresoun †er wro°t • Watz tried for his tricherie, †e trewest on erthe • The Green Knight, c1380 Sociolects! [class-based groupspeech differences] Ethnolects! [tribal-based groupspeech differences] Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  6. Language variation ! English 306A; Harris

  7. Language variation Different persons growing up in the same language are like different bushes trimmed and trained to take the shape of identical elephants. The anatomical details of twigs and branches will fulfill the elephantine form differently from bush to bush, but the overall outward results are alike. Idiolects! W.V.O. Quine English 306A; Harris

  8. Old English • Nu sculon herigean heofonrices weard, • meotodes meahte, and his modge†anc, • weorc wuldorfæder, swa he wundra gehwæs, • ece drihten, or onstealde. • Caedmon’s hymn, c670 Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  9. 1066 English 306A; Harris

  10. Modern English • Substratum (under-level) Germanic (Angles, Saxons etc.)king, law, deer, cow, cock, piss, … • Superstratum (over-level) Latinate (Norman French)monarch, justice, venison, beef, penis, urinate, … English 306A; Harris

  11. MutabilityLanguage change • Internal (isolation, fashion, prestige, …) • External (trade, war, imperialism, …) Phonological Morphological Lexical Syntactic Semantic English 306A; Harris

  12. Semantic change (hyponym / hypernym swap) • dog • … poodle hound spaniel … • Toy, French, … Grey, Blood, … Springer, Cocker, … hypernym hyponym hypernym hyponym English 306A; Harris

  13. Middle English hound … dogge poodle spaniel … Mastiff, Basset, … Toy, French, … Springer, Cocker, … hypernym hyponym hypernym hyponym dog hound hound dogge Semantic change (hyponym / hypernym swap) • Modern English • dog • … poodle hound spaniel … • Toy, French, … Grey, Blood, … Springer, Cocker, … English 306A; Harris

  14. Phonological change • night • knight • knee • name • cough • … Middle English Modern English • [nIFt] • [knIFt] • [knij] • [nQm´] • [kAF] • [nAit] • [nAit] • [nij] • [nejm] • [kAf] English 306A; Harris

  15. Morphological change English 306A; Harris

  16. Morphological change English 306A; Harris

  17. Lexical changes • Tofu • Interface • Robot • Radar • Sandwich • Mutton • F-bomb • Mayhaps • Hark • Cad • Elden • Burdalane • Sweltersome • Clyte English 306A; Harris

  18. Syntactic change Good even, Casca: brought you Caesar home? Good evening, Casca: did you bring Caesar home? English 306A; Harris

  19. MutabilitySubtotal • History of English • Periods • Events • Pressures to change • Internal/external • Aeta-, regio-, socio-, ethno-lects • Types of change • Semantic (e.g., dog/hound) • Phonogical (e.g., “cough”) • Morphological (e.g. ‘levelling’) • Lexical (words come, words go) • Syntactic (Yes/no question formation) English 306A; Harris

  20. Origins and varieties of languages • Reconstruction • Contrast and compare • Proto-languages • Language families • Indo-European • Pre-Indo-European • Origins • Lexical theories • Language theories English 306A; Harris

  21. Philology • Looking at texts for noteworthy signifier/signified linkages • Contrast and compare English 306A; Harris

  22. English father mother brother sister king milk meat German Vater Mutter Bruder Schwester König Milch Fleisch Philology, reconstruction, and language familiesGrimm’s Law English 306A; Harris

  23. Philology, reconstruction, and language familiesGrimm’s Law Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  24. Philology, reconstruction, and language familiesGrimm’s Law /f/ /p/ Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  25. Philology, reconstruction, and language familiesGrimm’s Law /p/—>/f/ Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  26. Philology, reconstruction, and language familiesGrimm’s Law Proto-Indo-European (*PIE) hypothetical, reconstructed language hypothetical, reconstructed languages Proto-Germanic Proto-Italic Proto-Indic Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  27. Language families Germanic Italic Indic Families Philo-logical evidence English 306A; Harris

  28. Indo-European Germanic Italic Indic Families Philo-logical evidence Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  29. Indo-European family English 306A; Harris

  30. Bow-wow theory • Language arose from onomatopoeia (iconic) Making noises to represent elements in the environment: animals, rain, expulsive gas, … Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  31. Pooh-pooh theory(AKA the ouch theory) • Language arose from spontaneous emotional noises (indexical) Sighs, moans, cries, ejections of surprise, fear, delight, … Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  32. Bow-wow & pooh-pooh theories • Lexical theories • Nothing about syntax • Nothing about phonology, morphology, … • Not mutually exclusive English 306A; Harris

  33. Yadda, yadda, yadda … that language evolved among humans to replace social grooming because the grooming time required by our large groups made impossible demands on our time. Language, I argue, evolved to fill the gap because it allows us to use the time we have available for social interaction more efficiently. Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  34. Yo-he-ho theory • Language arose in muscular and rhythmic efforts accompanying group work (indexical) Gathering, distributing, distance-pursuit of prey, … Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  35. Hmmmmm theory …a prelinguistic musical mode of thought and action • Communicative system Holistic Rhetorical Multimodal Rhythmic Melodic Mimetic Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  36. Throwing madonna theory • Nursing (left-side) • Motor/linguistic sequencing • Structural • Non-lexical • Piggy-backing theory Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  37. To be, or not to be. That is the question. [The origin of language may have to do with] certain physical laws relating to neuron packing or regulatory mechanisms. Neuron packing theory Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

  38. Language origins: sub-total • Bow-wow and pooh-pooh • Lexical • Social • Throwing Madonna, Neuron-packing • Non-lexical • Cognitive • Yadda-yadda-yadda • Non-lexical • Social • Ye-ho-ha, Hmmmmm • Non-lexical • Cognitive-Social NotMutuallyExclusive English 306A; Harris

  39. Historical linguistics • Languages change over time • External (war, imperialism, trade, …) • Internal (fashion, prestige, isolation, …) • Types of changes • Semantic, phonological, morphological, lexical, … • Genealogical relationships • Reconstructed proto-languages • Language families • Language origins • Lots of guesses, no clear solutions • Lexical, social, and cognitive variants Homo sapien #1 You are here English 306A; Harris

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